Beaufort, L., T. de
Garidel-Thoron, B. Linsley, D.
Oppo and N. Buchet. (2003). "Biomass burning and oceanic primary
production estimates in the Sulu Sea area over the last 380 kyr and the East
Asian monsoon dynamics." Marine
Geology 201(1-3): 53-65.
Coccolithophorid
assemblages and micro-charcoal content were analysed in giant piston core
MD97-2141 recovered in the Sulu Sea (Philippines). These proxies help to
reconstruct respectively the dynamics of the oceanic primary production (PP)
and biomass burning in that area. PP in the Sulu Sea intensifies during the
East Asian winter monsoon (EAWM) and therefore PP constitutes a proxy for EAWM
dynamics. Most of the precipitation in the Sulu Sea region occurs during the
East Asian summer monsoon (EASM). Because the intensity of biomass burning is
related to dryness of the surrounding area, the sedimentary micro-charcoal
content can be used as an inverse proxy for EASM intensity. Our results show
that the EAWM intensifies during glacial times in agreement with previous
studies. Precessional forcing appears to act directly on EAWN because of the
early response of PP in that frequency band. The micro-charcoal record exhibits
complex dynamics, which we attribute to the competing influence of the
long-term El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO)-like forcing and the
glacial/interglacial cycle on EASM. These influences create an unusual
frequency spectrum with power around 30 kyr and 19 kyr attributed to the
non-linear response to the 100-kyr cycle (glacial) and the 23-kyr (ENSO) cycle.
A factor of two increase in the amplitude of the micro-charcoal variability
between 51 and 10 ka BP could correspond to Homo sapiens biomass burning in the
style of the fire-stick farming of the Australian Aborigines. We also find, on
precession cycles, an opposite phase between EASM and EAWM records and an
advance of -[delta]18O and [delta]18O respectively by 2000 yr.