articleScienceJun 24, 2010Closed access

The Last Glacial Termination

University of Maine · Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory · +3 more institutions

PubMed
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Abstract

A major puzzle of paleoclimatology is why, after a long interval of cooling climate, each late Quaternary ice age ended with a relatively short warming leg called a termination. We here offer a comprehensive hypothesis of how Earth emerged from the last global ice age. A prerequisite was the growth of very large Northern Hemisphere ice sheets, whose subsequent collapse created stadial conditions that disrupted global patterns of ocean and atmospheric circulation. The Southern Hemisphere westerlies shifted poleward during each northern stadial, producing pulses of ocean upwelling and warming that together accounted for much of the termination in the Southern Ocean and Antarctica. Rising atmospheric CO2 during…

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Authors

6

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Southern Hemisphere
  • Stadial
  • Upwelling
  • Westerlies
  • Paleoclimatology
  • Climatology
  • Northern Hemisphere
  • Glacial period
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Life below water
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