Palaeoenvironmental change in tropical Australasia over the last 30,000 years - a synthesis by the OZ-INTIMATE group
- Reeves, Jessica, Bostock, Helen, Ayliffe, Linda, Barrows, Timothy, De Deckker, Patrick, Devriendt, Laurent, Dunbar, Gavin, Drysdale, Russell, Fitzsimmons, Kathryn, Gagan, Michael, Griffiths, Michael, Haberle, Simon, Jansen, John, Krause, Claire, Lewis, Stephen, McGregor, Helen, Mooney, Scott, Moss, Patrick, Nanson, Gerald, Purcell, Anthony, van der Kaars, Sander
- Authors: Reeves, Jessica , Bostock, Helen , Ayliffe, Linda , Barrows, Timothy , De Deckker, Patrick , Devriendt, Laurent , Dunbar, Gavin , Drysdale, Russell , Fitzsimmons, Kathryn , Gagan, Michael , Griffiths, Michael , Haberle, Simon , Jansen, John , Krause, Claire , Lewis, Stephen , McGregor, Helen , Mooney, Scott , Moss, Patrick , Nanson, Gerald , Purcell, Anthony , van der Kaars, Sander
- Date: 2013
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Quaternary Science Reviews Vol. 74, no. (2013), p. 97-114
- Full Text:
- Reviewed:
- Description: The tropics are the major source of heat and moisture for the Australasian region. Determining the tropics' response over time to changes in climate forcing mechanisms, such as summer insolation, and the effects of relative sea level on exposed continental shelves during the Last Glacial period, is an ongoing process of re-evaluation. We present a synthesis of climate proxy data from tropical Australasia spanning the last 30,000 years that incorporates deep sea core, coral, speleothem, pollen, charcoal and terrestrial sedimentary records.Today, seasonal variability is governed largely by the annual migration of the inter-tropical convergence zone (ITCZ), influencing this region most strongly during the austral summer. However, the position of the ITCZ has varied through time. Towards the end of Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 3, conditions were far wetter throughout the region, becoming drier first in the south. Universally cooler land and sea-surface temperature (SST) were characteristic of the Last Glacial Maximum, with drier conditions than previously, although episodic wet periods are noted in the fluvial records of northern Australia. The deglacial period saw warming first in the Coral Sea and then the Indonesian seas, with a pause in this trend around the time of the Antarctic Cold Reversal (c. 14.5ka), coincident with the flooding of the Sunda Shelf. Wetter conditions occurred first in Indonesia around 17ka and northern Australia after 14ka. The early Holocene saw a peak in marine SST to the northwest and northeast of Australia. Modern vegetation was first established on Indonesia, then progressively south and eastward to NE Australia. Flores and the Atherton Tablelands show a dry period around 11.6ka, steadily becoming wetter through the early Holocene. The mid-late Holocene was punctuated by millennial-scale variability, associated with the El Niño-Southern Oscillation; this is evident in the marine, coral, speleothem and pollen records of the region. © 2012.
- Description: 4 Earth Sciences
- Description: 21 History And Archaelogy
- Description: 2003011213
- Authors: Reeves, Jessica , Bostock, Helen , Ayliffe, Linda , Barrows, Timothy , De Deckker, Patrick , Devriendt, Laurent , Dunbar, Gavin , Drysdale, Russell , Fitzsimmons, Kathryn , Gagan, Michael , Griffiths, Michael , Haberle, Simon , Jansen, John , Krause, Claire , Lewis, Stephen , McGregor, Helen , Mooney, Scott , Moss, Patrick , Nanson, Gerald , Purcell, Anthony , van der Kaars, Sander
- Date: 2013
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Quaternary Science Reviews Vol. 74, no. (2013), p. 97-114
- Full Text:
- Reviewed:
- Description: The tropics are the major source of heat and moisture for the Australasian region. Determining the tropics' response over time to changes in climate forcing mechanisms, such as summer insolation, and the effects of relative sea level on exposed continental shelves during the Last Glacial period, is an ongoing process of re-evaluation. We present a synthesis of climate proxy data from tropical Australasia spanning the last 30,000 years that incorporates deep sea core, coral, speleothem, pollen, charcoal and terrestrial sedimentary records.Today, seasonal variability is governed largely by the annual migration of the inter-tropical convergence zone (ITCZ), influencing this region most strongly during the austral summer. However, the position of the ITCZ has varied through time. Towards the end of Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 3, conditions were far wetter throughout the region, becoming drier first in the south. Universally cooler land and sea-surface temperature (SST) were characteristic of the Last Glacial Maximum, with drier conditions than previously, although episodic wet periods are noted in the fluvial records of northern Australia. The deglacial period saw warming first in the Coral Sea and then the Indonesian seas, with a pause in this trend around the time of the Antarctic Cold Reversal (c. 14.5ka), coincident with the flooding of the Sunda Shelf. Wetter conditions occurred first in Indonesia around 17ka and northern Australia after 14ka. The early Holocene saw a peak in marine SST to the northwest and northeast of Australia. Modern vegetation was first established on Indonesia, then progressively south and eastward to NE Australia. Flores and the Atherton Tablelands show a dry period around 11.6ka, steadily becoming wetter through the early Holocene. The mid-late Holocene was punctuated by millennial-scale variability, associated with the El Niño-Southern Oscillation; this is evident in the marine, coral, speleothem and pollen records of the region. © 2012.
- Description: 4 Earth Sciences
- Description: 21 History And Archaelogy
- Description: 2003011213
Impact of different ENSO regimes on southwest pacific tropical cyclones
- Chand, Savin, McBride, John, Tory, Kevin, Wheeler, Matthew, Walsh, Kevin
- Authors: Chand, Savin , McBride, John , Tory, Kevin , Wheeler, Matthew , Walsh, Kevin
- Date: 2013
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Journal of Climate Vol. 26, no. 2 (2013), p. 600-608
- Full Text: false
- Reviewed:
- Description: The influence of different types of ENSO on tropical cyclone (TC) interannual variability in the central southwest Pacific region (58-258S, 1708E-1708W) is investigated. Using empirical orthogonal function analysis and an agglomerative hierarchical clustering of early tropical cyclone season Pacific sea surface temperature, years are classified into four separate regimes (i.e., canonical El Niño, canonical La Niña, positive-neutral, and negative-neutral) for the period between 1970 and 2009.These regimes are found to have a large impact on TC genesis over the central southwest Pacific region. Both the canonical El Niño and the positive-neutral years have increased numbers of cyclones, with an average of 4.3 yr-1 for positive-neutral and 4 yr-1 for canonical El Niño. In contrast, during a La Niña and negative-neutral events, substantially fewer TCs (averages of ;2.2 and 2.4 yr-1, respectively) are observed in the central southwest Pacific. The enhancement of TC numbers in both canonical El Niño and positive-neutral years is associated with the extension of favorable low-level cyclonic relative vorticity, and low vertical wind shear eastward across the date line. Relative humidity and SST are also very conducive forgenesis in this region during canonical El Niño and positiveneutral events. The patterns are quite different, however, with the favorable conditions concentrated in the date line region for the positive-neutral, as compared with conditions farther eastward for the canonical El Niño regime. A significant result of the study is the demonstration that ENSO-neutralevents can be objectively clustered into two separate regimes, each with very different impacts on TCgenesis. © 2013 American Meteorological Society.
- Authors: Chand, Savin , McBride, John , Tory, Kevin , Wheeler, Matthew , Walsh, Kevin
- Date: 2013
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Journal of Climate Vol. 26, no. 2 (2013), p. 600-608
- Full Text: false
- Reviewed:
- Description: The influence of different types of ENSO on tropical cyclone (TC) interannual variability in the central southwest Pacific region (58-258S, 1708E-1708W) is investigated. Using empirical orthogonal function analysis and an agglomerative hierarchical clustering of early tropical cyclone season Pacific sea surface temperature, years are classified into four separate regimes (i.e., canonical El Niño, canonical La Niña, positive-neutral, and negative-neutral) for the period between 1970 and 2009.These regimes are found to have a large impact on TC genesis over the central southwest Pacific region. Both the canonical El Niño and the positive-neutral years have increased numbers of cyclones, with an average of 4.3 yr-1 for positive-neutral and 4 yr-1 for canonical El Niño. In contrast, during a La Niña and negative-neutral events, substantially fewer TCs (averages of ;2.2 and 2.4 yr-1, respectively) are observed in the central southwest Pacific. The enhancement of TC numbers in both canonical El Niño and positive-neutral years is associated with the extension of favorable low-level cyclonic relative vorticity, and low vertical wind shear eastward across the date line. Relative humidity and SST are also very conducive forgenesis in this region during canonical El Niño and positiveneutral events. The patterns are quite different, however, with the favorable conditions concentrated in the date line region for the positive-neutral, as compared with conditions farther eastward for the canonical El Niño regime. A significant result of the study is the demonstration that ENSO-neutralevents can be objectively clustered into two separate regimes, each with very different impacts on TCgenesis. © 2013 American Meteorological Society.
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