Publication:
Scenarios Regarding the Lead of Equatorial Sea Surface Temperature Over Global Ice Volume

Thumbnail Image

Date

2006

Published Version

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

American Geophysical Union
The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you.

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Citation

Ashkenazy, Yosef and Eli Tziperman. 2006. Scenarios regarding the lead of equatorial sea surface temperature over global ice volume. Paleoceanography 21(PA2006): 1-6.

Research Data

Abstract

Recent proxy evidences indicate that the equatorial sea surface temperature (SST) may have led global ice volume by ∼3 kyr during the late Pleistocene glacial cycles. Given the short timescales of equatorial dynamics, equatorial climate variability is characterized by a timescale of no more than a few years. It would seem somewhat surprising therefore that the equatorial ocean and atmosphere can determine and lead the long-timescale 100 kyr glacial cycles. Two scenarios are presented according to which such a lead may be observed even when the equatorial ocean and atmosphere are not necessarily responsible for leading the glacial cycles (they may still act as a strong amplifier). First, it is shown that if the plankton-based proxy reflects the warm season temperature rather than an annual temperature, it may lead the global temperature, although the dynamics of the glacial cycles may still be dominated by the Northern Hemisphere ice sheets. It is noted that a present-day seasonal bias of the equatorial proxy record is still inconclusive, and the possibility of a proxy bias only during glacial times is considered as well. A second scenario is suggested in which global sea level rises before equatorial SST, yet the later evolution of factors such as the atmospheric CO2 and equatorial SST is faster and takes the lead over global ice volume. If the initial rise of sea level is masked by a sufficiently large proxy noise (because of instrumental and natural noise), it may not be seen and the lead may be attributed to the equatorial SST and CO2.

Description

Keywords

Terms of Use

Metadata Only

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

Related Stories