Publication | Open Access
Coral‐Derived Western Pacific Tropical Sea Surface Temperatures During the Last Millennium
44
Citations
73
References
2018
Year
Ocean TemperaturesEngineeringPaleoceanographyCoral EcosystemsOceanographyEarth ScienceMarine MeteorologyCoral ReefAbstract ReconstructionsOceanographic ResearchSea-level HistoryClimate ChangeMarine GeologyGeographyOceanic ForcingCryospherePaleoclimatologyEarth's ClimateClimate DynamicsClimatologyLast MillenniumMedieval Climate AnomalyMarine Biology
Abstract Reconstructions of ocean temperatures prior to the industrial era serve to constrain natural climate variability on decadal to centennial timescales, yet relatively few such observations are available from the west Pacific Warm Pool. Here we present multiple coral‐based sea surface temperature reconstructions from Yongle Atoll, in the South China Sea over the last ~1,250 years (762–2013 Common Era [CE]). Reconstructed coral Sr/Ca‐sea surface temperatures indicate that the “Little Ice Age (1711–1817 CE)” period was ~0.7°C cooler than the “Medieval Climate Anomaly (913‐1132 CE)” and that late 20th century warming of the western Pacific is likely unprecedented over the past millennium. Our findings suggest that the Western Pacific Warm Pool may have expanded (contracted) during the Medieval Climate Anomaly (Little Ice Age), leading to a strengthening (weakening) of the Asian summer monsoon, as recorded in Chinese stalagmites.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1