Millennial-scale dynamics of the East Asian winter monsoon during the last 200,000 years.
de
Garidel-Thoron, T., L. Beaufort, B. Linsley and S. Dannenman.
Paleoceanography
(2001)16(5):
491-502.
The
primary productivity dynamics of the last 200,000 years in the Sulu Sea was
reconstructed using the abundance of the coccolithophore Florisphaera profunda
in the IMAGES MD97-2141 core. We find that primary productivity was enhanced
during glacial periods, which we suggest is due to a stronger East Asian winter
monsoon. During the last 80 kyr, eight significant increases in primary
productivity (PP) in the Sulu Sea are similar to East Asian winter monsoon
changes recorded in Chinese loess. The PP maxima are not linked with Heinrich
events (HE) in the North Atlantic, although four PP peaks are synchronous with
HE. The PP oscillations have frequencies near those of the Dansgaard-Oeschger
cycles in Northern Hemisphere ice records and indicate a teleconnection of the
East Asian winter monsoon with Greenland climate. In this Sulu Sea record the
East Asian winter monsoon oscillates with periodicities of similar to6,
4.2-3.4, 2.3, and 1.5 kyr. In particular, the 1.5 kyr cycle exhibits a strong
and pervasive signal from stage 6 to the Holocene without any ice volume
modulation. This stationarity suggests that the 1.5 kyr cycle is not driven by
some high-latitude forcing.