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Climate Impact of Late Quaternary Equatorial Pacific Sea Surface Temperature Variations
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References
2000
Year
EngineeringPaleoceanographySst CoincideOceanographyGlacial ProcessEarth ScienceMagnesium/calcium DataClimate ImpactPleistoceneGeochronologySea-level HistoryClimate ChangeClimate VariabilityMeteorologyGeographyOceanic ForcingCryospherePaleoclimatologyClimate SystemClimatologyGlobal ClimateSst Estimates
Magnesium/calcium data from planktonic foraminifera in equatorial Pacific sediment cores demonstrate that tropical Pacific sea surface temperatures (SSTs) were 2.8 degrees +/- 0.7 degrees C colder than the present at the last glacial maximum. Glacial-interglacial temperature differences as great as 5 degrees C are observed over the last 450 thousand years. Changes in SST coincide with changes in Antarctic air temperature and precede changes in continental ice volume by about 3 thousand years, suggesting that tropical cooling played a major role in driving ice-age climate. Comparison of SST estimates from eastern and western sites indicates that the equatorial Pacific zonal SST gradient was similar or somewhat larger during glacial episodes. Extraction of a salinity proxy from the magnesium/calcium and oxygen isotope data indicates that transport of water vapor into the western Pacific was enhanced during glacial episodes.
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