Causes of ice age intensification across the Mid-Pleistocene Transition
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Chalk, Thomas B
Hain, Mathis P
Foster, Gavin L
Rohling, Eelco
Sexton, P.F.
Badger, M.P.S.
Cherry, Soraya G
Hasenfratz, Adam P
Haug, Gerald H
Jaccard, Samuel
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National Academy of Sciences (USA)
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During the Mid-Pleistocene Transition (MPT; 1,200–800 kya), Earth’s orbitally paced ice age cycles intensified, lengthened from ~40,000 (~40 ky) to ~100 ky, and became distinctly asymmetrical. Testing hypotheses that implicate changing atmospheric CO2 levels as a driver of the MPT has proven difficult with available observations. Here, we use orbitally resolved, boron isotope CO2 data to show that the glacial to interglacial CO2 difference increased from ~43 to ~75 μatm across the MPT, mainly because of lower glacial CO2 levels. Through carbon cycle modeling, we attribute this decline primarily to the initiation of substantive dust-borne iron fertilization of the Southern Ocean during peak glacial stages. We also observe a twofold steepening of the relationship between sea level and CO2-related climate forcing that is suggestive of a change in the dynamics that govern ice sheet stability, such as that expected from the removal of subglacial regolith or interhemispheric ice sheet phase-locking. We argue that neither ice sheet dynamics nor CO2 change in isolation can explain the MPT. Instead, we infer that the MPT was initiated by a change in ice sheet dynamics and that longer and deeper post-MPT ice ages were sustained by carbon cycle feedbacks related to dust fertilization of the Southern Ocean as a consequence of larger ice sheets.
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PNAS - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
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Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercialNoDerivatives License 4.0 (CC BY-NC-ND)
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