Antarctic evidence for an abrupt northward shift of the Southern Hemisphere westerlies at 32 ka BP.
Abhijith U VenugopalNancy A N BertlerJeffrey P SeveringhausEdward J BrookGiuseppe CorteseJames E LeeThomas BlunierPaul A MayewskiHelle Astrid KjærLionel CarterMichael E WeberRichard H LevyRebecca L PyneMarcus J VandergoesPublished in: Nature communications (2023)
High-resolution ice core records from coastal Antarctica are particularly useful to inform our understanding of environmental changes and their drivers. Here, we present a decadally resolved record of sea-salt sodium (a proxy for open-ocean area) and non-sea salt calcium (a proxy for continental dust) from the well-dated Roosevelt Island Climate Evolution (RICE) core, focusing on the time period between 40-26 ka BP. The RICE dust record exhibits an abrupt shift towards a higher mean dust concentration at 32 ka BP. Investigating existing ice-core records, we find this shift is a prominent feature across Antarctica. We propose that this shift is linked to an equatorward displacement of Southern Hemisphere westerly winds. Subsequent to the wind shift, data suggest a weakening of Southern Ocean upwelling and a decline of atmospheric CO 2 to lower glacial values, hence making this shift an important glacial climate event with potentially important insights for future projections.