A Multidisciplinary Approach to Late Quaternary Paleoclimatology with an Emphasis on Sub-Saharan West Africa and the Last Interglacial Period

A primary goal of paleoclimatology is to extend the instrumental record to capture a wider range of natural variability, documenting the climate system's response to past changes that have no analog in the historical record. Sediment archives of the recent geologic past, both marine and lacustr...

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Main Author: McKay, Nicholas Paul
Other Authors: Overpeck, Jonathan T.
Language:en
Published: The University of Arizona. 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/238647
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-2386472015-10-23T04:56:35Z A Multidisciplinary Approach to Late Quaternary Paleoclimatology with an Emphasis on Sub-Saharan West Africa and the Last Interglacial Period McKay, Nicholas Paul Overpeck, Jonathan T. Cole, Julia Cohen, Andrew Brown, Erik Russell, Joellen Overpeck, Jonathan T. Last Interglacial Sahel Geosciences Eemian Intertropical Convergence Zone A primary goal of paleoclimatology is to extend the instrumental record to capture a wider range of natural variability, documenting the climate system's response to past changes that have no analog in the historical record. Sediment archives of the recent geologic past, both marine and lacustrine, offer the opportunity to study how climate responds to a range of forcings and changing boundary conditions on timescales ranging from years to millennia. In this dissertation I use lacustrine and marine sediment to investigate changes late Quaternary climate, with particular focus on the Last Interglacial period (LIG). First, I use multiple approaches to reconstruct long-term changes in the West African Monsoon by investigating centennial-scale hydrologic variability recorded in Lake Bosumtwi sediments over the past 530,000 years. Over this interval, hydrology in the region is driven by a complex interplay of orbital forcing and glacial-interglacial boundary conditions. Lake level was generally much lower between 50 and 300 ka, likely due to the redistribution of rainfall from the tropics to the subtropics, driven by eccentricity's amplification of precession. Consequently, the Holocene highstand at the lake was both larger and longer lived than the maximum highstand during the LIG.Annual layers were continuously deposited through the LIG in Lake Bosumtwi, and I also present a new, 12,100 year-long, varve record spanning the interval from 128.6 to 116.5 ka. Over the course of the LIG, lake level generally tracks sea surface temperatures (SST) in Gulf of Guinea, including an abrupt drop in lake level that lasted about 500 years ca. 118 ka, coincident with cool SSTs in the North Atlantic and severe aridity in Europe. I find that the despite the generally drier conditions, hydrology varied on similar timescales as the late Holocene, with pronounced multidecadal to centennial-scale variability with non-stationary periodicities. I also investigate the contribution of ocean thermal expansion to sea level rise during the LIG, using a synthesis of paleoceanographic data and a climate model simulation. Globally, LIG SSTs were similar to, or slightly cooler than late Holocene SSTs, with the exception of the North Atlantic, which was several degrees warmer. Consequently, thermal expansion was likely a minor component of sea level rise during the interval, explaining between -0.3 and 0.4 m. of the 6 to 8 m highstand. Lastly, I tested the potential of Raman spectroscopy as a new, non-destructive technique to rapidly measure oxygen isotopic ratios in carbonates at extremely high resolution. Analyses on a suite a synthetic calcites indicate that ¹⁸O/¹⁶O ratios can be measured directly from the Raman spectra and have a 1:1 correspondence with traditional mass-spectrometry measurements. At present, the technique does not have the precision necessary to record natural variability, although there is considerable potential for improving the precision of the technique. 2012 text Electronic Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10150/238647 en Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Last Interglacial
Sahel
Geosciences
Eemian
Intertropical Convergence Zone
spellingShingle Last Interglacial
Sahel
Geosciences
Eemian
Intertropical Convergence Zone
McKay, Nicholas Paul
A Multidisciplinary Approach to Late Quaternary Paleoclimatology with an Emphasis on Sub-Saharan West Africa and the Last Interglacial Period
description A primary goal of paleoclimatology is to extend the instrumental record to capture a wider range of natural variability, documenting the climate system's response to past changes that have no analog in the historical record. Sediment archives of the recent geologic past, both marine and lacustrine, offer the opportunity to study how climate responds to a range of forcings and changing boundary conditions on timescales ranging from years to millennia. In this dissertation I use lacustrine and marine sediment to investigate changes late Quaternary climate, with particular focus on the Last Interglacial period (LIG). First, I use multiple approaches to reconstruct long-term changes in the West African Monsoon by investigating centennial-scale hydrologic variability recorded in Lake Bosumtwi sediments over the past 530,000 years. Over this interval, hydrology in the region is driven by a complex interplay of orbital forcing and glacial-interglacial boundary conditions. Lake level was generally much lower between 50 and 300 ka, likely due to the redistribution of rainfall from the tropics to the subtropics, driven by eccentricity's amplification of precession. Consequently, the Holocene highstand at the lake was both larger and longer lived than the maximum highstand during the LIG.Annual layers were continuously deposited through the LIG in Lake Bosumtwi, and I also present a new, 12,100 year-long, varve record spanning the interval from 128.6 to 116.5 ka. Over the course of the LIG, lake level generally tracks sea surface temperatures (SST) in Gulf of Guinea, including an abrupt drop in lake level that lasted about 500 years ca. 118 ka, coincident with cool SSTs in the North Atlantic and severe aridity in Europe. I find that the despite the generally drier conditions, hydrology varied on similar timescales as the late Holocene, with pronounced multidecadal to centennial-scale variability with non-stationary periodicities. I also investigate the contribution of ocean thermal expansion to sea level rise during the LIG, using a synthesis of paleoceanographic data and a climate model simulation. Globally, LIG SSTs were similar to, or slightly cooler than late Holocene SSTs, with the exception of the North Atlantic, which was several degrees warmer. Consequently, thermal expansion was likely a minor component of sea level rise during the interval, explaining between -0.3 and 0.4 m. of the 6 to 8 m highstand. Lastly, I tested the potential of Raman spectroscopy as a new, non-destructive technique to rapidly measure oxygen isotopic ratios in carbonates at extremely high resolution. Analyses on a suite a synthetic calcites indicate that ¹⁸O/¹⁶O ratios can be measured directly from the Raman spectra and have a 1:1 correspondence with traditional mass-spectrometry measurements. At present, the technique does not have the precision necessary to record natural variability, although there is considerable potential for improving the precision of the technique.
author2 Overpeck, Jonathan T.
author_facet Overpeck, Jonathan T.
McKay, Nicholas Paul
author McKay, Nicholas Paul
author_sort McKay, Nicholas Paul
title A Multidisciplinary Approach to Late Quaternary Paleoclimatology with an Emphasis on Sub-Saharan West Africa and the Last Interglacial Period
title_short A Multidisciplinary Approach to Late Quaternary Paleoclimatology with an Emphasis on Sub-Saharan West Africa and the Last Interglacial Period
title_full A Multidisciplinary Approach to Late Quaternary Paleoclimatology with an Emphasis on Sub-Saharan West Africa and the Last Interglacial Period
title_fullStr A Multidisciplinary Approach to Late Quaternary Paleoclimatology with an Emphasis on Sub-Saharan West Africa and the Last Interglacial Period
title_full_unstemmed A Multidisciplinary Approach to Late Quaternary Paleoclimatology with an Emphasis on Sub-Saharan West Africa and the Last Interglacial Period
title_sort multidisciplinary approach to late quaternary paleoclimatology with an emphasis on sub-saharan west africa and the last interglacial period
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/238647
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