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Promotion of glacial ice sheet buildup 60-115 kyr B.P. by precessionally paced Northern Hemispheric meltwater pulses

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Abstract

Compared to the rapid glacial terminations, the buildup of glacial ice sheets in the Northern Hemisphere took tens of thousands of years. During the buildup phase, the growing ice sheets were subject to major orbitally induced summer insolation changes, without experiencing complete disintegration. The reason for this behavior still remains elusive. Here we propose that between 110 and 60 kyr B.P., every ∼20 kyr increased summer insolation in high northern latitudes triggered massive instabilities of the Northern Hemispheric ice sheets, leading to glacial meltwater pulses and subsequent disruptions of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC). Associated severe cooling of the northern extratropics may have offset the warming trends driven by increased precessional summer insolation. This temperature response diminished the melting trend and stabilized the ice sheets. Our results suggest that the competition between the direct insolation changes and the indirect climate responseto AMOC disturbances may be an important negative feedback that supports the buildup of glacial ice sheets.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberPA4208
JournalPaleoceanography
Volume25
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 1 2010

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