0000000000060855

AUTHOR

Dirk C Leuschner

High-frequency oscillations of the last 70,000 years in the tropical/subtropical and polar climates

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Geochemical implications for changing dust supply by the Indian Monsoon system to the Arabian Sea during the last glacial cycle

Element concentrations of 43 elements as well as inorganic and organic carbon content of sediment core 70KL from the western Arabian Sea were measured with high (1 cm) sample resolution. Principal components of the sediment’s chemical composition were determined with the help of statistical principle component analysis. These components are representing the major environmental factors at the site. The most important processes controlling the observed variations are the changing lithogenic influx derived from the major wind systems of the region (i.e., the Arabian northwesterly winds, the northeast winter monsoon and the southwest summer monsoon), summer monsoon associated upwelling and biog…

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Palaeoenvironmental changes in the arid and subarid belt (Sahara-Sahel-Arabian peninsula) from 150 kyr to present

The PEP III Arid to Subarid Belt includes the largest hot desert in the world, the Sahara- Arabian desert and the Sahel zone. The region of interest extends south of the Atlas Mountains and south and east of the Mediterranean Sea to approximately 10 °N and shows a broadly zonal pattern with a varying seasonal distribution of precipitation. In the north (ca. 20–23 °N), rainfall results from the southward displacement of the midlatitude westerlies during winter whereas the south is governed by seasonal northward migration of the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ). Contraction and expansion phases of these presently semi-arid to hyper-arid desert areas result from significant changes in loc…

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Possible influence of Zoophycos bioturbation on radiocarbon dating and environmental interpretation

Abstract In paleoenvironmental studies of marine sediments bioturbation is often neglected and/or only treated as a diffusion-like process affecting only the uppermost sediment with decreasing intensity with depth. Deep dwelling animals, like the Zoophycos producing animal, however, affect the sediment composition by transporting material over vertical distances of up to 1 m below the seafloor. In Arabian Sea sediment cores 70KL, 64KL and 57KL a significant downward transport of particles by Zoophycos can be observed. Within the Zoophycos burrows the faunal composition of both planktonic and benthic foraminiferal assemblages as well as the isotopic signature of foraminiferal carbonate diffe…

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The low-latitude monsoon climate during Dansgaard–Oeschger cycles and Heinrich Events

During the last 100,000 years Dansgaard–Oeschger cycles (D/O cycles) and Heinrich Events have been the dominant signal of past climate variability over Greenland and the North Atlantic. The succession of stadials (cold) and interstadials (warm) associated with these cycles has been documented in records from the entire northern hemisphere, South America, New Zealand, Antarctica, the South Atlantic and the Southern Ocean. Evidently, climate forcing in the D/O band affects both hemispheres. The origin and cause of these teleconnected patterns is still unknown, even if a large proportion of the cooling in Europe and northern Asia during Heinrich Events is a meteorological response to cold surf…

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Orbital insolation forcing of the Indian Monsoon – a motor for global climate changes?

Abstract Both modern and ancient Indian summer monsoons are driven by transequatorial pressure differences, directly coupled with the insolation difference between the Northern and Southern subtropical Hemispheres. A high-resolution record of upwelling and dust flux from the western Arabian Sea resembles an insolation-based Indian Summer Monsoon Index. This index and the observed monsoonal climate variations share major elements on the orbital obliquity and precessional band with the Specmap marine oxygen isotope record, representing global ice volume. The long-term evolution of the index mirrors almost exactly the insolation changes at 65°N, showing that the forcing of low latitude climate…

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Alternative chronologies for Late Quaternary (Last Interglacial–Holocene) deep sea sediments via optical dating of silt-sized quartz

Abstract We summarize the results of a test on the potential of optical dating for the age assessment of Late Quaternary deep-sea sediments. Our approach combines a single aliquot regeneration (SAR) protocol for equivalent dose ( D e ) estimation on fine silt-sized quartz with a time-dependent evaluation of supported and unsupported long-lived radioisotopes within the deposited sediment matrix. For this purpose nine samples from two independently dated deep-sea cores from the Indian Ocean were obtained. The SAR analysis resulted in mean D e estimates with precisions ranging from 0.9% to 3.7%. Combination of these data with measured radioisotope concentrations resulted in stratigraphically s…

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