La Niña-like conditions in the eastern equatorial Pacific and a stronger Choco jet in the northern Andes during the last glaciation

Six deep sea cores from the eastern equatorial Pacific (EEP) were analyzed for planktonic foraminifera and stable isotopes in order to reconstruct sea surface temperatures (SST) for the last 40 ka. South of the Equatorial Front the abundance of Globorotalia inflata increased, and SST decreased by &g...

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Veröffentlicht in:Paleoceanography 2003-06, Vol.18 (2), p.np-n/a
Hauptverfasser: Martínez, Ignacio, Keigwin, Lloyd, Barrows, Timothy T., Yokoyama, Yusuke, Southon, John
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Keigwin, Lloyd
Barrows, Timothy T.
Yokoyama, Yusuke
Southon, John
description Six deep sea cores from the eastern equatorial Pacific (EEP) were analyzed for planktonic foraminifera and stable isotopes in order to reconstruct sea surface temperatures (SST) for the last 40 ka. South of the Equatorial Front the abundance of Globorotalia inflata increased, and SST decreased by >5°C (core ODP846B), creating a stronger SST meridional gradient and advection of the Peru Current than present for the ∼16–35 ka interval. A sharper SST meridional gradient forced stronger Choco jet events and a moisture increase in western Colombia, which supplied, through the San Juan River and the south‐flowing equatorial and the Peru‐Chile countercurrents, abundant hemipelagic quartz over the northern Peru basin (core TR163‐31B). The Choco jet, and its associated mesoscale convective cells, provoked an increase in snow precipitation over the Central Cordillera of Colombia and the advance of the Murillo glacier. In synchrony with the intensified Choco jet events, the “dry island” effect over the Eastern Cordillera of Colombia intensified, and the level of Fuquene Lake dropped.
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source Wiley Journals; Wiley Free Content; Wiley-Blackwell AGU Digital Library
subjects eastern equatorial Pacific
Freshwater
Globorotalia inflata
La Niña
last glacial maximum
modern analogue technique
Panama Basin
planktonic foraminifera
title La Niña-like conditions in the eastern equatorial Pacific and a stronger Choco jet in the northern Andes during the last glaciation
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