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Asian Winter Monsoon Imprint on Holocene SST Changes at the Northern Coast of the South China Sea
37
Citations
48
References
2019
Year
EngineeringOceanographyHolocene Sst ChangesEarth ScienceNorthern CoastHoloceneOceanic SystemsClimate VariabilityHydrometeorologyMeteorologyMarine GeologyGeographySouth China SeaEast Asian LanguagesOceanic ForcingCryospherePaleoclimatologyOrganic BiomarkersEarth's ClimateClimate DynamicsClimatologyAugmented Sst GradientSummer MonsoonIntegrated Tropical Sst
Abstract Independent inference of the Asian winter monsoon (AWM), albeit achieved at several sparse sites, has reached no consensus for its variability through the Holocene. A sediment core from the northern coast of the South China Sea (SCS) was utilized to analyze organic biomarkers at (bi‐)decadal resolution, unveiling how SCS oceanic conditions fingerprint the AWM signal. Generally, alkenone sea surface temperature (SST) record, resembling the temporal structures of integrated tropical SST over the past 7,500 years, shows abnormal cool temperatures (up to ~4 °C) during the Little Ice Age and between ~1,200 and 2,500 years BP, when windborne terrigenous hopane compounds experienced considerable increases superimposed on a general increasing trend. Our results, together with augmented SST gradient between the SCS coast and open ocean, consistently suggest AWM strengthening toward the late Holocene. An intensified AWM during cold intervals like the Little Ice Age would have provided strong positive feedback to enhance coastal cooling.
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