NORCE Norwegian Research Centre, Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research, Jahnebakken 5, 5007, Bergen, Norway.
Centre for Early Sapiens Behaviour (SapienCE), AHKR Institute, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway.
Sci Data. 2020 Nov 11;7(1):385. doi: 10.1038/s41597-020-00689-7.
The interocean transfer of thermocline water between the Indian and the Atlantic Oceans known as 'Agulhas leakage' is of global significance as it influences the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) on different time scales. Variability in the Agulhas Current regime is key in shaping hydroclimate on the adjacent coastal areas of the African continent today as well as during past climates. However, the lack of long, continuous records from the proximal Agulhas Current region dating beyond the last glacial cycle prevents elucidation of its role in regional and wider global climate changes. This is the first continuous record of hydrographic variability (SST; δO) from the Agulhas Current core region spanning the past 270,000 years. The data set is analytical sound and provides a solid age model. As such, it can be used by paleoclimate scientists, archaeologists, and climate modelers to evaluate, for example, linkages between the Agulhas Current system and AMOC dynamics, as well as connections between ocean heat transport and Southern African climate change in the past and its impact on human evolution.
印度洋和大西洋之间的温跃层水的跨洋转移,即所谓的“阿古拉斯漏流”,具有全球意义,因为它会在不同的时间尺度上影响大西洋经向翻转环流(AMOC)。阿古拉斯流系的变化是当今以及过去气候条件下塑造非洲大陆毗邻沿海地区水文气候的关键因素。然而,由于缺乏可追溯到末次冰期周期以外的近端阿古拉斯流区域的长期、连续记录,因此无法阐明其在区域和更广泛的全球气候变化中的作用。这是过去 27 万年以来首次对跨越阿古拉斯洋流核心区域的水文变异性(SST;δO)进行的连续记录。该数据集具有良好的分析性,并提供了可靠的年龄模型。因此,古气候科学家、考古学家和气候模型专家可以使用该数据集来评估阿古拉斯洋流系统与 AMOC 动力之间的联系,以及海洋热量输送与过去南非气候变化及其对人类进化的影响之间的联系。