Numerous ice core records are now available that cover the Last Glacial cycle both in Greenland and in
Antarctica. Recent developments in coherent ice core chronologies now enable us to depict with a
precision of a few centuries the relationship between climate records in Greenland and Antarctica over
the millennial scale variability of the Last Glacial period. Stacks of Greenland and Antarctic water isotopic
records nicely illustrate a seesaw pattern with the abrupt warming in Greenland being concomitant with
the beginning of the cooling in Antarctica at the Antarctic Isotopic Maximum (AIM). In addition, from the
precise estimate of chronological error bars and additional high resolution measurements performed on
the EDC and TALDICE ice cores, we show that the seesaw pattern does not explain the regional variability
in Antarctic records with clear two step structures occurring during the warming phase of AIM 8 and 12.
Our Antarctic high resolution data also suggest possible teleconnections between changes in low latitude
atmospheric circulation and Antarctic without any Greenland temperature fingerprint.