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Northern hemisphere controls on tropical southeast African climate during the past 60,000 years
Authors:Tierney Jessica E  Russell James M  Huang Yongsong  Damsté Jaap S Sinninghe  Hopmans Ellen C  Cohen Andrew S
Affiliation:Department of Geological Sciences, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912, USA. Jessica_Tierney@brown.edu
Abstract:The processes that control climate in the tropics are poorly understood. We applied compound-specific hydrogen isotopes (deltaD) and the TEX(86) (tetraether index of 86 carbon atoms) temperature proxy to sediment cores from Lake Tanganyika to independently reconstruct precipitation and temperature variations during the past 60,000 years. Tanganyika temperatures follow Northern Hemisphere insolation and indicate that warming in tropical southeast Africa during the last glacial termination began to increase approximately 3000 years before atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations. deltaD data show that this region experienced abrupt changes in hydrology coeval with orbital and millennial-scale events recorded in Northern Hemisphere monsoonal climate records. This implies that precipitation in tropical southeast Africa is more strongly controlled by changes in Indian Ocean sea surface temperatures and the winter Indian monsoon than by migration of the Intertropical Convergence Zone.
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