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- Title
Initiation of a stable convective hydroclimatic regime in Central America circa 9000 years BP.
- Authors
Winter, Amos; Zanchettin, Davide; Lachniet, Matthew; Vieten, Rolf; Pausata, Francesco S. R.; Ljungqvist, Fredrik Charpentier; Cheng, Hai; Edwards, R. Lawrence; Miller, Thomas; Rubinetti, Sara; Rubino, Angelo; Taricco, Carla
- Abstract
Many Holocene hydroclimate records show rainfall changes that vary with local orbital insolation. However, some tropical regions display rainfall evolution that differs from gradual precessional pacing, suggesting that direct rainfall forcing effects were predominantly driven by sea-surface temperature thresholds or inter-ocean temperature gradients. Here we present a 12,000 yr continuous U/Th-dated precipitation record from a Guatemalan speleothem showing that Central American rainfall increased within a 2000 yr period from a persistently dry state to an active convective regime at 9000 yr BP and has remained strong thereafter. Our data suggest that the Holocene evolution of Central American rainfall was driven by exceeding a temperature threshold in the nearby tropical oceans. The sensitivity of this region to slow changes in radiative forcing is thus strongly mediated by internal dynamics acting on much faster time scales. What drives hydroclimate changes in tropical regions is not well known. Here, the authors present a 12,000 year long precipitation record from Guetemala which shows that exceeding a threshold in sea surface temperatures caused Central American rainfall to change from a dry to an active convective regime around 9000 years ago.
- Subjects
CENTRAL America; OCEAN temperature; RADIATIVE forcing; RAINFALL
- Publication
Nature Communications, 2020, Vol 11, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
2041-1723
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1038/s41467-020-14490-y