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Asynchronous Climate Changes in the North Atlantic and Japan During the Last Termination
203
Citations
24
References
2003
Year
Milankovitch CycleFuture Climatic ChangeEngineeringAsynchronous Climate ChangesEarth ScienceHoloceneRegional Climate ResponsePaleoenvironmental ChangeLast TerminationGeochronologyClimate ChangeClimate VariabilityLaminated Sediment SequenceGeographyNorth AtlanticCryospherePaleoclimatologyClimate SystemEarth's ClimateClimatologyGlobal ClimateCold Reversal
Pollen records from the annually laminated sediment sequence in Lake Suigetsu, Japan, suggest a sequence of climate changes during the Last Termination that resembles that of the North Atlantic region but with noticeable differences in timing. An interstadial interval commenced a few centuries earlier [approximately 15,000 years before the present (yr B.P.)] than the North Atlantic GI-1 (Bölling) event. Conversely, the onset of a Younger Dryas (YD)-like cold reversal (12,300 to 11,250 yr B.P.) postdated the North Atlantic GS-1 (YD) event by a few centuries. Climate in the Far East during the Last Termination reflected solar insolation changes as much as Atlantic influences.
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