Increased dust deposition in the Pacific Southern Ocean during glacial periods
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2014Metadata
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Lamy, F.
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Increased dust deposition in the Pacific Southern Ocean during glacial periods
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Abstract
Dust deposition in the Southern Ocean constitutes a critical modulator of past global climate
variability, but how it has varied temporally and geographically is underdetermined. Here, we
present data sets of glacial-interglacial dust-supply cycles from the largest Southern Ocean sector,
the polar South Pacific, indicating three times higher dust deposition during glacial periods
than during interglacials for the past million years. Although the most likely dust source for the
South Pacific is Australia and New Zealand, the glacial-interglacial pattern and timing of lithogenic
sediment deposition is similar to dust records from Antarctica and the South Atlantic dominated
by Patagonian sources. These similarities imply large-scale common climate forcings, such as
latitudinal shifts of the southern westerlies and regionally enhanced glaciogenic dust mobilization
in New Zealand and Patagonia.
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/126931
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Science, vol. 343, 24 january 2014
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