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Journal ArticleDOI

Persistent Solar Influence on North Atlantic Climate During the Holocene

TLDR
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.
Abstract
Surface winds and surface ocean hydrography in the subpolar North Atlantic appear to have been influenced by variations in solar output through the entire Holocene. The evidence comes from a close correlation between inferred changes in production rates of the cosmogenic nuclides carbon-14 and beryllium-10 and centennial to millennial time scale changes in proxies of drift ice measured in deep-sea sediment cores. A solar forcing mechanism therefore may underlie at least the Holocene segment of the North Atlantic's "1500-year" cycle. The surface hydrographic changes may have affected production of North Atlantic Deep Water, potentially providing an additional mechanism for amplifying the solar signals and transmitting them globally.

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Vegetation, fire, climate and human disturbance history in the southwestern Mediterranean area during the late Holocene

TL;DR: In this paper, detailed pollen, charcoal, isotope and magnetic susceptibility data from an alpine lake sediment core from Sierra Nevada, southern Spain record changes in vegetation, fire history and lake sedimentation since ca. 4100 cal yr BP.
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Vegetation and climate history reconstructed from an alpine lake in central Tienshan Mountains since 8.5 ka BP

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a palynological sequence and discuss the past vegetation and climate changes based on core BY10A from the Swan Lake, an alpine lake situated at an inter-montane basin in the central Tienshan Mountains, Xinjiang, northwestern China.
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The paleoclimatology of Lake Baikal: A diatom synthesis and prospectus

TL;DR: In this paper, a review of diatom and associated biogenic silica records from Lake Baikal sediments is provided, and a paleoclimatic synthesis of changes at various timescales over the Quaternary.
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Variations in the strength of the North Atlantic bottom water during Holocene

TL;DR: In this paper, a multi-proxy study of the changes in the dynamics and the properties of bottom water mass in the subpolar North Altantic during Holocene is presented, coupled with sortable silt and benthic carbon isotopes.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Age dating and the orbital theory of the ice ages: Development of a high-resolution 0 to 300,000-year chronostratigraphy

TL;DR: Using the concept of "orbital tuning", a continuous, high-resolution deep-sea chronostratigraphy has been developed spanning the last 300,000 yr as mentioned in this paper.
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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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Revised carbonate-water isotopic temperature scale

TL;DR: The relationship between temperature and O(18) content relative to that for a Cretaceous belemnite of the Pee Dee formation previously reported (Epstein, Buchsbaum, Lowenstam, and Urey, 1951) has been re-determined using modified procedures for removing organic matter from shells, and is found to be 16.5 - 4.3 δ + 0.14 δ^2
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Macintosh Program performs time‐series analysis

TL;DR: A Macintosh computer program that can perform many time-series analysis procedures is now available on the Internet free of charge, originally designed for paleoclimatic time series.
Journal ArticleDOI

Holocene climatic instability: A prominent, widespread event 8200 yr ago

TL;DR: The most prominent Holocene climatic event in Greenland ice-core proxies, with approximately half the amplitude of the Younger Dryas, occurred ∼8000 to 8400 yr ago.
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