Journal article
Changes in biomass burning mark the onset an ENSO-influenced climate regime at 42°S in southwest Tasmania, Australia
MS Fletcher, A Benson, H Heijnis, PS Gadd, LC Cwynar, ABH Rees
Quaternary Science Reviews | Published : 2015
Abstract
We use macroscopic charcoal and sediment geochemistry analysis of two proximal upper montane lakes located at 42°S in southwest Tasmania, Australia, to test the role of the southern hemisphere westerly winds (SWW) and the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) in governing the climate of this sector of the southern mid-to high-latitudes. Inter-annual climate anomalies in the study area are driven by changes in both ENSO and the Southern Annular Mode (SAM - an index that describes seasonal to decadal shifts in the SWW), making it an ideal location to test assumptions about the varying influence of the SWW and ENSO, two important components of the global climate system, through time. We find mult..
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Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
M.-S.F. acknowledges financial support from ARC projects DI110100019 and IN140100050, CONICYT project 3110180 and AINSE Award ALNGRA12003. Thanks for Rachael-Ann Fletcher for analysing macroscopic charcoal from TAS1106. Thanks to Scott Nichols, Jared Pedro, Lucy Gayler and Peter Shimeld for assistance in the field. We thank Agathe Lise-Pronovost for providing the Laguna Potrok Aike magnetic data. We also thank Patricio I Moreno for valuable comments on an earlier draft of this manuscript.