Enhanced climate instability in the North Atlantic and southern Europe during the Last Interglacial.
Polychronis C TzedakisR N DrysdaleV MargariL C SkinnerLaurie MenvielR H RhodesA S TaschettoD A HodellS J CrowhurstJohn C HellstromAnthony E FallickJ O GrimaltJ F McManusB MartratZ MokeddemF ParreninE RegattieriK RoeG ZanchettaPublished in: Nature communications (2018)
Considerable ambiguity remains over the extent and nature of millennial/centennial-scale climate instability during the Last Interglacial (LIG). Here we analyse marine and terrestrial proxies from a deep-sea sediment sequence on the Portuguese Margin and combine results with an intensively dated Italian speleothem record and climate-model experiments. The strongest expression of climate variability occurred during the transitions into and out of the LIG. Our records also document a series of multi-centennial intra-interglacial arid events in southern Europe, coherent with cold water-mass expansions in the North Atlantic. The spatial and temporal fingerprints of these changes indicate a reorganization of ocean surface circulation, consistent with low-intensity disruptions of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC). The amplitude of this LIG variability is greater than that observed in Holocene records. Episodic Greenland ice melt and runoff as a result of excess warmth may have contributed to AMOC weakening and increased climate instability throughout the LIG.