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Gerard C. Bond

Researcher at Lamont–Doherty Earth Observatory

Publications -  73
Citations -  22986

Gerard C. Bond is an academic researcher from Lamont–Doherty Earth Observatory. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ice sheet & Glacial period. The author has an hindex of 43, co-authored 73 publications receiving 21921 citations. Previous affiliations of Gerard C. Bond include Williams College & University of California, Davis.

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Evidence for general instability of past climate from a 250-kyr ice-core record

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a detailed stable isotope record for the full length of the Greenland Ice-core Project Summit ice core, extending over the past 250 kyr according to a calculated timescale, and find that climate instability was not confined to the last glaciation, but appears also have been marked during the last interglacial (as explored more fully in a companion paper), and during the previous Saale-Holstein glacial cycle.
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A Pervasive Millennial-Scale Cycle in North Atlantic Holocene and Glacial Climates

TL;DR: In this paper, the North Atlantic deep sea cores reveal that abrupt shifts punctuated what is conventionally thought to have been a relatively stable Holocene climate, and they make up a series of climate shifts with a cyclicity close to 1470 ± 500 years, which is the most recent manifestation of a pervasive millennial-scale climate cycle operating independently of the glacial-interglacial climate state.
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Persistent Solar Influence on North Atlantic Climate During the Holocene

TL;DR: A solar forcing mechanism therefore may underlie at least the Holocene segment of the North Atlantic's “1500-year” cycle, potentially providing an additional mechanism for amplifying the solar signals and transmitting them globally.
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Correlations between climate records from North Atlantic sediments and Greenland ice

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present records of sea surface temperature from North Atlantic sediments spanning the past 90 kyr which contain a series of rapid temperature oscillations closely matching those in the ice-core record, confirming predictions that the ocean must bear the imprint of the Dansgaard-Oeschger events.
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Evidence for massive discharges of icebergs into the North Atlantic ocean during the last glacial period

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present evidence that the most recent six Heinrich layers, deposited between 14,000 and 70,000 years ago, record marked decreases in sea surface temperature and salinity, decreases in the flux of planktonic foraminifera to the sediments, and short-lived, massive discharges of icebergs originating in eastern Canada.