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Planktonic foraminifera, sea surface temperatures, and mechanisms of oceanic change in the Peru and south equatorial currents, 0–150 ka BP

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Title Planktonic foraminifera, sea surface temperatures, and mechanisms of oceanic change in the Peru and south equatorial currents, 0–150 ka BP
Names Feldberg, Melissa J. (creator)
Mix, Alan C. (creator)
Date Issued 2003 (iso8601)
Note Copyright 2003 by the American Geophysical Union
Abstract Planktonic foraminiferal faunas of the southeast Pacific indicate that sea surface temperatures (SST) have
varied by as much as 8–10°C in the Peru Current, and by ~5–7°C along the equator, over the past 150,000 years.
Changes in SST at times such as the Last Glacial Maximum reflect incursion of high-latitude species Globorotalia
inflata and Neogloboquadrina pachyderma into the eastern boundary current and as far north as the equator. A
simple heat budget model of the equatorial Pacific shows that observed changes in Peru Current advection can
account for about half of the total variability in equatorial SSTs. The remaining changes in equatorial SST, which
are likely related to local changes in upwelling or pycnocline depth, precede changes in polar climates as recorded
by δ¹⁸O. This partitioning of processes in eastern equatorial Pacific SST reveals that net ice-age cooling here
reflects first a rapid response of equatorial upwelling to insolation, followed by a later response to changes in the
eastern boundary current associated with high-latitude climate (which closely resembles variations in atmospheric
CO₂ as recorded in the Vostok ice core). Although precise mechanisms responsible for the equatorial upwelling
component of climate change remain uncertain, one likely candidate that may operate independently of the ice
sheets is insolation-driven changes in El Nin˜o/Southern Oscillation (ENSO) frequency. Early responses of
equatorial SST detected both here and elsewhere highlight the sensitivity of tropical systems to small changes in
seasonal insolation. The scale of tropical changes we have observed are substantially greater than model
predictions, suggesting a need for further quantitative assessment of processes associated with long-term climate
change.
Genre Article
Topic paleoceanography
Identifier Feldberg, M. J., and A. C. Mix, Planktonic foraminifera, sea surface temperatures, and mechanisms of oceanic change in the Peru and south equatorial currents, 0–150 ka BP, Paleoceanography, 18(1), 1016, doi:10.1029/2001PA000740, 2003

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