Understanding millennial and sub-millennial climate variability during past low eccentricity interglacials similar to the Holocene is important for forecasting the evolution of climate and natural variability. The Ideale section (Montalbano Jonico, Southern Italy) studied here provides one of the best records of MIS 19c, the closest orbital analog to the Holocene. This exposed marine series covers Termination IX to the inception of MIS 18 with very high sedimentation rates (i.e. 90e200 cm/ka). We present 1) benthic d18O and d13C records at 90e200 year time-resolution, 2) a new 40Ar/39Ar age of 774.1 ± 0.9 ka for tephra layer V4 (Matuyama-Brunhes transitional period) and 3) new calcareous plankton, palynological and authigenic 10Be/9Be data. Our new Bayesian depth-age model suggests a 11.5 ± 3.4 ka (95% confidence) duration for the climatic optimum. The d18O series reveals millennial-scale oscillations (with sharp transitions < 200 years) between ~774.0 and the onset of MIS 18 (~757.0 ka) with a cyclicity of about 5.4 ka. Spectral analysis and band-pass filtering indicate that these climate oscillations existed throughout the entire MIS 19 period, although they were dampened during MIS 19c, which is chiefly controlled by orbitally-driven insolation. The amplitude of those sub-orbital oscillations increased towards MIS 18 as the climate became drier and cooler. The Ideale section reveals, with unprecedented detail, millennialscale climatic oscillations of MIS 19b-a that have been observed worldwide. They highlight the response of the central Mediterranean area to North Atlantic climatic variation (i.e. oceanic circulation and atmospheric processes related to ice-sheet dynamics) during this low eccentricity interglacial.
High-resolution foraminifer stable isotope record of MIS 19 at Montalbano Jonico, southern Italy: A window into Mediterranean climatic variability during a low-eccentricity interglacial / Nomade S.; Bassinot F.; Marino M.; Simon Q.; Dewilde F.; Maiorano P.; Isguder G.; Blamart D.; Girone A.; Scao V.; Pereira A.; Toti F.; Bertini A.; Combourieu-Nebout N.; Peral M.; Bourles D.L.; Petrosino P.; Gallicchio S.; Ciaranfi N.. - In: QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS. - ISSN 0277-3791. - STAMPA. - 205:(2019), pp. 106-125. [10.1016/j.quascirev.2018.12.008]
High-resolution foraminifer stable isotope record of MIS 19 at Montalbano Jonico, southern Italy: A window into Mediterranean climatic variability during a low-eccentricity interglacial
Toti F.;Bertini A.;
2019
Abstract
Understanding millennial and sub-millennial climate variability during past low eccentricity interglacials similar to the Holocene is important for forecasting the evolution of climate and natural variability. The Ideale section (Montalbano Jonico, Southern Italy) studied here provides one of the best records of MIS 19c, the closest orbital analog to the Holocene. This exposed marine series covers Termination IX to the inception of MIS 18 with very high sedimentation rates (i.e. 90e200 cm/ka). We present 1) benthic d18O and d13C records at 90e200 year time-resolution, 2) a new 40Ar/39Ar age of 774.1 ± 0.9 ka for tephra layer V4 (Matuyama-Brunhes transitional period) and 3) new calcareous plankton, palynological and authigenic 10Be/9Be data. Our new Bayesian depth-age model suggests a 11.5 ± 3.4 ka (95% confidence) duration for the climatic optimum. The d18O series reveals millennial-scale oscillations (with sharp transitions < 200 years) between ~774.0 and the onset of MIS 18 (~757.0 ka) with a cyclicity of about 5.4 ka. Spectral analysis and band-pass filtering indicate that these climate oscillations existed throughout the entire MIS 19 period, although they were dampened during MIS 19c, which is chiefly controlled by orbitally-driven insolation. The amplitude of those sub-orbital oscillations increased towards MIS 18 as the climate became drier and cooler. The Ideale section reveals, with unprecedented detail, millennialscale climatic oscillations of MIS 19b-a that have been observed worldwide. They highlight the response of the central Mediterranean area to North Atlantic climatic variation (i.e. oceanic circulation and atmospheric processes related to ice-sheet dynamics) during this low eccentricity interglacial.I documenti in FLORE sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.