The astronomical theory of climate and the age of the Brunhes-Matuyama magnetic reversal

Below oxygen isotope stage 16, the orbitally derived time-scale developed by Shackleton et al. [1] from ODP site 677 in the equatorial Pacific differs significantly from previous ones [e.g., 2–5], yielding estimated ages for the last Earth magnetic reversals that are 5–7% older than the K Ar values...

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Veröffentlicht in:Earth and planetary science letters 1994-08, Vol.126 (1), p.91-108
Hauptverfasser: Bassinot, Frank C., Labeyrie, Laurent D., Vincent, Edith, Quidelleur, Xavier, Shackleton, Nicholas J., Lancelot, Yves
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container_end_page 108
container_issue 1
container_start_page 91
container_title Earth and planetary science letters
container_volume 126
creator Bassinot, Frank C.
Labeyrie, Laurent D.
Vincent, Edith
Quidelleur, Xavier
Shackleton, Nicholas J.
Lancelot, Yves
description Below oxygen isotope stage 16, the orbitally derived time-scale developed by Shackleton et al. [1] from ODP site 677 in the equatorial Pacific differs significantly from previous ones [e.g., 2–5], yielding estimated ages for the last Earth magnetic reversals that are 5–7% older than the K Ar values [6–8] but are in good agreement with recent Ar Ar dating [9–11]. These results suggest that in the lower Brunhes and upper Matuyama chronozones most deep-sea climatic records retrieved so far apparently missed or misinterpreted several oscillations predicted by the astronomical theory of climate. To test this hypothesis, we studied a high-resolution oxygen isotope record from giant piston core MD900963 (Maldives area, tropical Indian Ocean) in which precession-related oscillations in δ 18O are particularly well expressed, owing to the superimposition of a local salinity signal on the global ice volume signal [12]. Three additional precession-related cycles are observed in oxygen isotope stages 17 and 18 of core MD900963, compared to the specmap composite curves [4,13], and stage 21 clearly presents three precession oscillations, as predicted by Shackleton et al. [1]. The precession peaks found in the δ 18O record from core MD900963 are in excellent agreement with climatic oscillations predicted by the astronomical theory of climate. Our δ 18O record therefore permits the development of an accurate astronomical time-scale. Based on our age model, the Brunhes-Matuyama reversal is dated at 775 ± 10 ka, in good agreement with the age estimate of 780 ka obtained by Shackleton et al. [1] and recent radiochronological Ar Ar datings on lavas [9–11]. We developed a new low-latitude, Upper Pleistocene δ 18O reference record by stacking and tuning the δ 18O records from core MD900963 and site 677 to orbital forcing functions.
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subjects Continental interfaces, environment
Earth sciences
Earth, ocean, space
Exact sciences and technology
Geophysics: general, magnetic, electric and thermic methods and properties
Internal geophysics
Marine and continental quaternary
Ocean, Atmosphere
Sciences of the Universe
Surficial geology
title The astronomical theory of climate and the age of the Brunhes-Matuyama magnetic reversal
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