Journal article

Evidence for obliquity forcing of glacial termination II

RN Drysdale, JC Hellstrom, G Zanchetta, AE Fallick, MFS Goñi, I Couchoud, J McDonald, R Maas, G Lohmann, I Isola

Science | AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE | Published : 2009

Abstract

Variations in the intensity of high-latitude Northern Hemisphere summer insolation, driven largely by precession of the equinoxes, are widely thought to control the timing of Late Pleistocene glacial terminations. However, recently it has been suggested that changes in Earth's obliquity may be a more important mechanism. We present a new speleothem-based North Atlantic marine chronology that shows that the penultimate glacial termination (Termination II) commenced 141,000 ± 2500 years before the present, too early to be explained by Northern Hemisphere summer insolation but consistent with changes in Earth's obliquity. Our record reveals that Terminations l and ll are separated by three obli..

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Grants

Awarded by Australian Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

We acknowledge the comments of P. Huybers, S. Frisia, R. Lever, P. Hoare, and three anonymous reviewers and thank A. Berger, B. Martrat, and L. Skinner for providing data. Laboratory and drafting assistance was provided by T. Smith, S. Komar, A. Tait, J. Dougans, and O. Rey-Lescure. This research was funded by the Federazione Speleologica Toscana, the University of Newcastle, and the Australian Research Council (DP0773700) and falls within the framework of the Scottish Alliance for Geoscience, Environment, and Society (SAGES).