Late Quaternary orbital variations through upper-ocean heat and atmosphere moisture of the western tropical Pacific: Low-latitude forcing of climate cycles
ID:1110
Oral (invited)
2025-01-14 13:30 (China Standard Time)
Session:Session 8-Modern and Past Processes of Ocean-Atmosphere-Climate Interactions in the Low-Latitude Pacific and Indian Ocean
Abstract
The tropical oceans over western Pacific and eastern Indian possess the largest volume of warm water in the upper-ocean, known as the Indo-Pacific Warm Pool (IPWP), which plays as the heat and moisture engine in the global climate system. Sedimentary reconstructions of planktonic foraminiferal proxies, including Mg/Ca for sea surface and thermocline water temperatures and novel triple oxygen isotopes for air humidity, consistently reveal a precession-dominated insolation control on the upper-ocean heat content and atmospheric moisture convergence over the IPWP in the Late Quaternary. Such a feature is accordant with speleothem δ18O records over the monsoonal regions of South/East Asia and South America, as well as the W-E zonal thermal contrast across the equatorial Pacific, and can be explained by the dynamics of summer monsoon circulation and El Niño-Southern Oscillations. It is implied that, from the point of view of energetics, the tropical ocean-atmosphere system can be directly driven by orbital insolation change, representing a “Low-latitude Forcing” of the global climate cycles, other than the "High-latitude Forcing" characterized by ice-sheet waxing and waning.
Keywords
Indo-Pacific Warm Pool, upper-ocean heat, moisture dynamics, orbital forcing