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Southern Hemisphere Water Mass Conversion Linked with North Atlantic Climate Variability
274
Citations
45
References
2005
Year
ClimatologyRegional Climate ResponseIntermediate Water ProductionEngineeringSea-level ChangePaleoceanographyIntermediate Water ConversionClimate SystemOceanic ForcingGlobal ClimateOceanographyCryospherePaleoclimatologyIntermediate Water VariabilityEarth ScienceClimate ChangeClimate Variability
Intermediate water variability at multicentennial scales is documented by 340,000-year-long isotope time series from bottom-dwelling foraminifers at a mid-depth core site in the southwest Pacific. Periods of sudden increases in intermediate water production are linked with transient Southern Hemisphere warm episodes, which implies direct control of climate warming on intermediate water conversion at high southern latitudes. Coincidence with episodes of climate cooling and minimum or halted deepwater convection in the North Atlantic provides striking evidence for interdependence of water mass conversion in both hemispheres, with implications for interhemispheric forcing of ocean thermohaline circulation and climate instability.
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