Publication Date:
2016-09-19
Description:
A set of published paleoclimate proxy records from the northern hemisphere, capturing different climate processes, is used to study glacial–interglacial differences in climate variability at centennial-to-millennial timescales during the past fifty thousand years. These proxy records reveal the existence of distinct oscillatory modes of the climate system. Glacial climate variability is dominated by a single mode, the Dansgaard–Oeschger cycles, composed of stadial and interstadial states. This glacial mode results in well-expressed covariations of the proxies, which are paced by a fundamental 1470-year signal. In contrast, there is no compelling evidence for a dominant and persistent centennial-to-millennial climate cycle during the Holocene. Interglacial climate variations seem to covary less pronounced than those of the last glacial period, suggesting the simultaneous activity of independent climate modes, each characterized by its own natural periods, between approximately 400–3000 years. A conceptual model is introduced to interpret this contrast in covariation at glacial–interglacial timescales. It is assumed that different climate modes can be represented by relaxation oscillators with different natural periods in the centennial-to-millennial band. Interactions among such oscillators may lead to a phase-synchronization and the development of a new climate mode with a joint frequency. We suggest that the coupled state with its synchronized dynamics resembles a glacial whereas the decoupled state represents an interglacial with its reduced covariations of climate fluctuations. The synchronization greatly enhances the frequency stability of the coupled system, and has the potential to reconcile the stability of the glacial 1470-year pacing cycle with an origin within the Earth's climate system.
Type:
Article
,
PeerReviewed
Format:
text
DOI:
10.1016/j.quascirev.2004.08.014
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