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Published January 2000 | public
Journal Article

Abrupt onset and termination of the African Humid Period: rapid climate responses to gradual insolation forcing

Abstract

A detailed (ca. 100 yr resolution) and well-dated (18 AMS ^(14)C dates to 23 cal. ka BP) record of latest Pleistoceneā€“Holocene variations in terrigenous (eolian) sediment deposition at ODP Site 658C off Cap Blanc, Mauritania documents very abrupt, large-scale changes in subtropical North African climate. The terrigenous record exhibits a well-defined period of low influx between 14.8 and 5.5 cal. ka BP associated with the African Humid Period, when the Sahara was nearly completely vegetated and supported numerous perennial lakes; an arid interval corresponding to the Younger Dryas Chronozone punctuates this humid period. The African Humid Period has been attributed to a strengthening of the African monsoon due to gradual orbital increases in summer season insolation. However, the onset and termination of this humid period were very abrupt, occurring within decades to centuries. Both transitions occurred when summer season insolation crossed a nearly identical threshold value, which was 4.2% greater than present. These abrupt climate responses to gradual insolation forcing require strongly non-linear feedback processes, and current coupled climate model studies invoke vegetation and ocean temperature feedbacks as candidate mechanisms for the non-linear climate sensitivity. The African monsoon climate system is thus a low-latitude corollary to the bi-stable behavior of high-latitude deep ocean thermohaline circulation, which is similarly capable of rapid and large-amplitude climate transitions.

Additional Information

Ā© 1999 Elsevier Science Ltd. Available online 21 April 2000. The authors would like to thank John Miller and Paula Weiss from the Ocean Drilling Program for their help in the detailed sampling Site 658C. Helpful comments and significant input to this paper were contributed by Bob Anderson, Andre Berger, Martin Claussen, Claude Hillaire-Marcel, George Kukla, and David Rind. Comments by two anonymous reviewers greatly improved the final manuscript. This project was supported by the Marine Geology and Geophysics division of the National Science Foundation. This is LDEO contribution number 5961.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 18, 2023