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  • 1
  • 2
    Publication Date: 2017-01-23
    Description: Quantifying the role and contribution of the world's oceans in past, present, and future global change is an essential goal in climate, paleoclimate and environmental studies. Although the global oceans interact and influence climate greatly, the marine environment is substantially under-represented in key climate assessment reports, especially during the last millennium (IPCC, 2007; see Palaeoclimate chapter: 6.6—The last 2000 years). The under-representation of marine records in key climate documents likely results from the often imprecise chronologies associated with many marine-based archives, which greatly hinders singular climate comparisons (lag/lead phasing relationships) with well-dated, and/or annually-resolved archives. However, several marine archive records have excellent chronological constraint. In particular, many marine bivalve taxa and coralline algae have annual increments that form within their carbonate framework, that can be used to establish an absolutely-dated chronology, via cross-dating techniques, from the marine environment. Additionally, in some cases, where sedimentation rates are high, and alternative chronological dating methods exist (e.g., tephrochronology) other than radiocarbon measurements (often greater than ±40 years uncertainty), sediment archives can provide continuous, sub-decadal records of environmental change for centuries to millennia. This brief introductory article and accompanying special issue will focus on the utilization of bivalves, coralline algae, and high-resolution marine sediment cores in paleoclimate and environmental studies within the most recent millennium with a focus on the Northern Hemisphere.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2015]. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of National Academy of Sciences for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 112 (2015): 4576–4581, doi: 10.1073/pnas.1422270112.
    Description: Assessing temporal variability in extreme rainfall events prior to the historical era is complicated by the sparsity of long-term ‘direct’ storm proxies. Here we present a 2200-yr-long, accurate and precisely dated record of cave flooding events from the northwest Australian tropics that we interpret, based on an integrated analysis of meteorological data and sediment layers within stalagmites, as representing a proxy for extreme rainfall events derived primarily from tropical cyclones (TCs) and secondarily from the regional summer monsoon. This time series reveals substantial multi-centennial variability in extreme rainfall, with elevated occurrence rates characterizing the twentieth century, the period 850-1450 CE, and 50-400 CE; reduced activity marks 1450-1650 CE and 500-850 CE. These trends are similar to reconstructed numbers of TCs in the North Atlantic and Caribbean basins, and form temporal and spatial patterns best explained by secular changes in the dominant mode of the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO), the primary driver of modern TC variability. We thus attribute long-term shifts in cyclogenesis in both the central Australian and North Atlantic sectors over the past two millennia to entrenched El Niño or La Niña states of the tropical Pacific. The influence of ENSO on monsoon precipitation in this region of northwest Australia is muted, but ENSO-driven changes to the monsoon may have complemented changes to TC activity.
    Description: Funding was provided by the Paleo Perspectives on Climate Change (P2C2) program of the United States National Science Foundation (NSF) through grant AGS-1103413, a seed grant from the Center for Global and Regional Environmental Research, and Cornell College (all to R.D.), the Kimberley Foundation Australia (to K-H.W.), and Penzance and John P. Chase Memorial Endowed Funds at WHOI (to C.U.).
    Description: 2015-09-30
    Keywords: Speleothem ; Tropical cyclone ; Monsoon ; El Niño/Southern Oscillation ; Australia
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Preprint
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: © The Author(s), 2018. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in A stalagmite test of north atlantic SST and iberian hydroclimate linkages over the last two glacial cycles. Climate of the Past, 14(12), (2018); 1893-1913., doi:10.5194/cp-14-1893-2018.
    Description: Close coupling of Iberian hydroclimate and North Atlantic sea surface temperature (SST) during recent glacial periods has been identified through the analysis of marine sediment and pollen grains co-deposited on the Portuguese continental margin. While offering precisely correlatable records, these time series have lacked a directly dated, site-specific record of continental Iberian climate spanning multiple glacial cycles as a point of comparison. Here we present a high-resolution, multi-proxy (growth dynamics and δ13C, δ18O, and δ234U values) composite stalagmite record of hydroclimate from two caves in western Portugal across the majority of the last two glacial cycles (∼220 ka). At orbital and millennial scales, stalagmite-based proxies for hydroclimate proxies covaried with SST, with elevated δ13C, δ18O, and δ234U values and/or growth hiatuses indicating reduced effective moisture coincident with periods of lowered SST during major ice-rafted debris events, in agreement with changes in palynological reconstructions of continental climate. While in many cases the Portuguese stalagmite record can be scaled to SST, in some intervals the magnitudes of stalagmite isotopic shifts, and possibly hydroclimate, appear to have been somewhat decoupled from SST.
    Description: This work was supported by the Center for Global and Regional Environmental Research, Cornell College (to Rhawn F. Denniston), and the US National Science Foundation (grant BCS-1118155 to Jonathan A. Haws, BCS-1118183 to Michael M. Benedetti, and AGS-1804132 to Caroline C. Ummenhofer). Field sampling was performed under the auspices of IGESPAR (to Jonathan A. Haws) and Associação de Estudos Subterrâneos e Defesa do Ambiente. Brandon Zinsious and Stephen Rasin contributed to fieldwork at BG, and Zachary LaPointe assisted with radioisotopic analyses; Suzanne Ankerstjerne performed stable isotope measurements. This paper benefitted tremendously from discussions with Maria F. Sánchez Goñi, David Hodell, and Chronis Tzedakis. We thank five anonymous reviewers who substantially improved this paper's scope and clarity through detailed and thoughtful assessments. Stable and U-series isotope data are available at the NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information website.
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: © The Author(s), 2013. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Biogeosciences 10 (2013): 4591-4606, doi:10.5194/bg-10-4591-2013.
    Description: The shells of marine mollusks are widely used archives of past climate and ocean chemistry. Whilst the measurement of mollusk δ18O to develop records of past climate change is a commonly used approach, it has proven challenging to develop reliable independent paleothermometers that can be used to deconvolve the contributions of temperature and fluid composition on molluscan oxygen isotope compositions. Here we investigate the temperature dependence of 13C–18O bond abundance, denoted by the measured parameter Δ47, in shell carbonates of bivalve mollusks and assess its potential to be a useful paleothermometer. We report measurements on cultured specimens spanning a range in water temperatures of 5 to 25 °C, and field collected specimens spanning a range of −1 to 29 °C. In addition we investigate the potential influence of carbonate saturation state on bivalve stable isotope compositions by making measurements on both calcitic and aragonitic specimens that have been cultured in seawater that is either supersaturated or undersaturated with respect to aragonite. We find a robust relationship between Δ47 and growth temperature. We also find that the slope of a linear regression through all the Δ47 data for bivalves plotted against seawater temperature is significantly shallower than previously published inorganic and biogenic carbonate calibration studies produced in our laboratory and go on to discuss the possible sources of this difference. We find that changing seawater saturation state does not have significant effect on the Δ47 of bivalve shell carbonate in two taxa that we examined, and we do not observe significant differences between Δ47-temperature relationships between calcitic and aragonitic taxa.
    Description: This work was funded by National Science Foundation grants ARC-1215551 to R. A. Eagle and A. K. Tripati, EAR-1024929 to R. A. Eagle and J. M. Eiler, and EAR-0949191 to A. K. Tripati. A. K. Tripati is also supported by the Hellman Fellowship program. Culture of bivalves in Kiel, Germany, was funded by the German Science Foundation (DFG Ei272/21-1, to Anton Eisenhauer) and the European Science Foundation (ESF) Collaborative Research Project CASIOPEIA (04 ECLIM FP08). Determination of bivalve mineralogy by J. B. Ries was funded by National Science Foundation grant OCE-1031995.
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: © The Author(s), 2016. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Scientific Reports 6 (2016): 34485, doi:10.1038/srep34485.
    Description: The seasonal north-south migration of the intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ) defines the tropical rain belt (TRB), a region of enormous terrestrial and marine biodiversity and home to 40% of people on Earth. The TRB is dynamic and has been shown to shift south as a coherent system during periods of Northern Hemisphere cooling. However, recent studies of Indo-Pacific hydroclimate suggest that during the Little Ice Age (LIA; AD 1400–1850), the TRB in this region contracted rather than being displaced uniformly southward. This behaviour is not well understood, particularly during climatic fluctuations less pronounced than those of the LIA, the largest centennial-scale cool period of the last millennium. Here we show that the Indo-Pacific TRB expanded and contracted numerous times over multi-decadal to centennial scales during the last 3,000 yr. By integrating precisely-dated stalagmite records of tropical hydroclimate from southern China with a newly enhanced stalagmite time series from northern Australia, our study reveals a previously unidentified coherence between the austral and boreal summer monsoon. State-of-the-art climate model simulations of the last millennium suggest these are linked to changes in the structure of the regional manifestation of the atmosphere’s meridional circulation.
    Description: Funded by grants from the US National Science Foundation (NSF) Paleo Perspectives on Climate Change (P2C2) program (AGS-1103413), the Center for Global and Regional Environmental Research, and Cornell College (to R.F.D.); and the NSF P2C2 program (AGS-1203704 and AGS-1602455) and the Penzance and John P. Chase Memorial Endowed Funds at WHOI (to C.C.U.).
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2022-05-26
    Description: © The Author(s), 2017. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here under a nonexclusive, irrevocable, paid-up, worldwide license granted to WHOI. It is made available for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Quaternary Science Reviews 176 (2017): 101-105, doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2017.09.014.
    Description: Recent studies of stalagmites from the Southern Hemisphere tropics of Indonesia revealed two shifts in monsoon activity not apparent in records from the Northern Hemisphere sectors of the Austral-Asian monsoon system: an interval of enhanced rainfall at ~19 ka, immediately prior to Heinrich Stadial 1, and a sharp increase in precipitation at ~9 ka. Determining whether these events are site-specific or regional is important for understanding the full range of sensitivities of the Austral-Asian monsoon. We present a discontinuous 40 kyr carbon isotope record of stalagmites from two caves in the Kimberley region of the north-central Australian tropics. Heinrich stadials are represented by pronounced negative carbon isotopic anomalies, indicative of enhanced rainfall associated with a southward shift of the intertropical convergence zone and consistent with hydroclimatic changes observed across Asia and the Indo- Pacific. Between 20-8 ka, however, the Kimberley stalagmites, like the Indonesian record, reveal decoupling of monsoon behavior from Southeast Asia, including the early deglacial wet period (which we term the Late Glacial Pluvial) and the abrupt strengthening of early Holocene monsoon rainfall.
    Description: Funded by grants from the U.S. National Science Foundation Paleo Perspectives on Climate Change program (AGS-1103413 and AGS-1502917 to RFD) and AGS-1602455 (to CCU and RFD), the Center for Global and Regional Environmental Research, and Cornell College (to RFD). CCU acknowledges support from The Investment in Science Fund given primarily by WHOI Trustee and Corporation Members. Support also received from the Kimberley Foundation Australia.
    Keywords: Stalagmite ; Carbon isotope ; Oxygen isotope ; Indo-Australian summer monsoon
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Preprint
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2023-02-25
    Description: © The Author(s), 2022. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Whitney, N. M., Wanamaker, A. D., Ummenhofer, C. C., Johnson, B. J., Cresswell-Clay, N., & Kreutz, K. J. Rapid 20th century warming reverses 900-year cooling in the Gulf of Maine. Communications Earth & Environment, 3(1), (2022): 179, https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-022-00504-8.
    Description: The Gulf of Maine, located in the western North Atlantic, has undergone recent, rapid ocean warming but the lack of long-term, instrumental records hampers the ability to put these significant hydrographic changes into context. Here we present multiple 300-year long geochemical records (oxygen, nitrogen, and previously published radiocarbon isotopes) measured in absolutely-dated Arctica islandica shells from the western Gulf of Maine. These records, in combination with climate model simulations, suggest that the Gulf of Maine underwent a long-term cooling over most of the last 1000 years, driven primarily by volcanic forcing and North Atlantic ocean dynamics. This cooling trend was reversed by warming beginning in the late 1800s, likely due to increased atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations and changes in western North Atlantic circulation. The climate model simulations suggest that the warming over the last century was more rapid than almost any other 100-year period in the last 1000 years in the region.
    Description: Funding for this research was provided by the following sources: Bruce Bowen Fellowship (N.M.W.), Geological Society of America Graduate Student Research Grant (N.M.W.), James E. and Barbara V. Moltz Fellowship for Climate-Related Research at WHOI (C.C.U.), Maine Marine Research Fund (B.J.J.), National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Climate and Global Change Postdoctoral Fellowship (N.M.W.), National Science Foundation grant OCE 1003438 and MGG 2028197 (A.D.W.), National Science Foundation grant OCE 1003423 (K.J.K.), National Science Foundation grant OCE 0929900 (B.J.J.). We thank the CESM1(CAM5) Last Millennium Ensemble Community Project for providing the climate model simulations, which were performed using the supercomputing resources provided by NSF/CISL/Yellowstone.
    Keywords: Climate and Earth system modelling ; Marine chemistry ; Palaeoceanography ; Physical oceanography
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2022-10-26
    Description: © The Author(s), 2020. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Thatcher, D. L., Wanamaker, A. D., Denniston, R. F., Asmerom, Y., Polyak, V. J., Fullick, D., Ummenhofer, C. C., Gillikin, D. P., & Haws, J. A. Hydroclimate variability from western Iberia (Portugal) during the Holocene: insights from a composite stalagmite isotope record. Holocene, (2020): 095968362090864, doi:10.1177/0959683620908648.
    Description: Iberia is predicted under future warming scenarios to be increasingly impacted by drought. While it is known that this region has experienced multiple intervals of enhanced aridity over the Holocene, additional hydroclimate-sensitive records from Iberia are necessary to place current and future drying into a broader perspective. Toward that end, we present a multi-proxy composite record from six well-dated and overlapping speleothems from Buraca Gloriosa (BG) cave, located in western Portugal. The coherence between the six stalagmites in this composite stalagmite record illustrates that climate (not in-cave processes) impacts speleothem isotopic values. This record provides the first high-resolution, precisely dated, terrestrial record of Holocene hydroclimate from west-central Iberia. The BG record reveals that aridity in western Portugal increased secularly from 9.0 ka BP to present, as evidenced by rising values of both carbon (δ13C) and oxygen (δ18O) stable isotope values. This trend tracks the decrease in Northern Hemisphere summer insolation and parallels Iberian margin sea surface temperatures (SST). The increased aridity over the Holocene is consistent with changes in Hadley Circulation and a southward migration of the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ). Centennial-scale shifts in hydroclimate are coincident with changes in total solar irradiance (TSI) after 4 ka BP. Several major drying events are evident, the most prominent of which was centered around 4.2 ka BP, a feature also noted in other Iberian climate records and coinciding with well-documented regional cultural shifts. Substantially, wetter conditions occurred from 0.8 ka BP to 0.15 ka BP, including much of the ‘Little Ice Age’. This was followed by increasing aridity toward present day. This composite stalagmite proxy record complements oceanic records from coastal Iberia, lacustrine records from inland Iberia, and speleothem records from both northern and southern Spain and depicts the spatial and temporal variability in hydroclimate in Iberia.
    Description: The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This work was supported, in part, by the US National Science Foundation (Grants: #1804528 to ADW; #1804635 to RD; #1804132 to CCU; #1806025 to YA and VP; #1805163 to DPG; BCS-0455145, BCS-0612923, and BCS-1118155 to JAH).
    Keywords: Drought ; Holocene ; Hydroclimate ; Iberia ; Portugal ; Stalagmite
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
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  • 10
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    In:  Supplement to: Butler, Paul G; Richardson, Christopher A; Scourse, James D; Witbaard, Rob; Schöne, Bernd R; Fraser, Nicole M; Wanamaker, Alan D; Bryant, Charlotte L; Harris, Ian; Robertson, Iain (2009): Accurate increment identification and the spatial extent of the common signal in five Arctica islandica chronologies from the Fladen Ground, northern North Sea. Paleoceanography, 24(2), PA2210, https://doi.org/10.1029/2008PA001715
    Publication Date: 2023-05-12
    Description: The creation of networks of shell-based chronologies which can provide regionally extensive high-resolution proxies for the marine environment depends on the spatial extent of the common environmental signal preserved in the shell banding and on the reliability of the dating model. Here Arctica islandica chronologies from five neighboring sites in the North Sea are compared, and the strength of the common environmental signal across distances up to 80 km is analyzed using statistical techniques derived from dendrochronology. The signal is found to be coherent across these distances. In a linked study, chronologies based on one of the same sites but constructed by two different research teams are compared. Methodological differences in increment interpretation are found to lead to slippage in the dating models. Systematic inclusion or exclusion of intermittently occurring increments results in the two chronologies becoming misaligned by 4 years over a 70-year period. Comparisons with neighboring chronologies indicate that such increments can generally be regarded as genuine annual increments even if they are not visible in all shells.
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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