Role of eccentricity in early Holocene African and Asian summer monsoons

被引:0
|
作者
Chi-Hua Wu
Shih-Yu Lee
Pei-Chia Tsai
机构
[1] Academia Sinica,Research Center for Environmental Changes
来源
Scientific Reports | / 11卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The effect of precession on paleoclimate changes depends on eccentricity. However, whether and to what degree eccentricity relates to millennial-scale monsoonal changes remain unclear. By investigating climate simulations with a fixed precession condition of 9 ka before the present, we explored the potential influence of eccentricity on early-Holocene changes in the Afro–Asian summer monsoons. Compared with the lower eccentricity of the present day, higher eccentricity in the early Holocene strengthened the continental summer monsoons, Pacific anticyclone, and Hadley circulation, particularly over the ocean. Over Africa, the eccentricity-induced “dry-gets-wetter” condition could be related to the Green Sahara, suggesting a superimposed effect of precession. Over the western Pacific, the tropical response to eccentricity may have been competitive in terms of what an extremely high obliquity may have caused. A downscaled modulation of eccentricity in relation to precession and obliquity cannot be ignored when paleomonsoon records are studied. Regarding early-Holocene monsoonal changes in South Asia, however, a high eccentricity may have had only a secondary effect on enhancing the monsoonal precipitation in the southern edge of the Tibetan Plateau, exhibiting the weak power of candle-like heating. This suggested that sizable monsoonal changes over the northern Indian Ocean and India–Pakistan region are unrelated to early-Holocene eccentricity.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [11] Relative impacts of insolation changes, meltwater fluxes and ice sheets on African and Asian monsoons during the Holocene
    Charline Marzin
    Pascale Braconnot
    Masa Kageyama
    Climate Dynamics, 2013, 41 : 2267 - 2286
  • [12] Sensitivity of the African and Asian monsoons to mid-Holocene insolation and data-inferred surface changes
    Texier, Delphine
    De Noblet, Nathalie
    Braconnot, Pascale
    2000, American Meteorological Society (13)
  • [13] Impact of orbitally-driven seasonal insolation changes on Afro-Asian summer monsoons through the Holocene
    Wu, Chi-Hua
    Tsai, Pei-Chia
    COMMUNICATIONS EARTH & ENVIRONMENT, 2021, 2 (01):
  • [14] Sensitivity of the African and Asian monsoons to mid-Holocene insolation and data-inferred surface changes
    Texier, D
    de Noblet, N
    Braconnot, P
    JOURNAL OF CLIMATE, 2000, 13 (01) : 164 - 181
  • [15] Impact of orbitally-driven seasonal insolation changes on Afro-Asian summer monsoons through the Holocene
    Chi-Hua Wu
    Pei-Chia Tsai
    Communications Earth & Environment, 2
  • [16] The effects of Asian summer monsoons on algal blooms in reservoirs
    Jung, Sungmin
    Shin, Myoungsun
    Kim, Jaiku
    Eum, Jaesung
    Lee, Yunkyoung
    Lee, Jaeyong
    Choi, Youngsoon
    You, Kyunga
    Owen, Jeffrey
    Kim, Bomchul
    INLAND WATERS, 2016, 6 (03) : 406 - 413
  • [17] A high-resolution record of Holocene rainfall variations from the western Chinese Loess Plateau: antiphase behaviour of the African/Indian and East Asian summer monsoons
    Maher, BA
    Hu, MY
    HOLOCENE, 2006, 16 (03): : 309 - 319
  • [18] Testing the causes of synchronous abrupt climate changes in the Asian summer monsoons and the North Atlantic during the last glacial and Holocene
    Morrill C
    Otto-Bliesner B
    Wagner A
    地球环境学报, 2011, 2 (01) : 318 - 318
  • [19] Role of Asian and African orography in Indian summer monsoon
    Chakraborty, A
    Nanjundiah, RS
    Srinivasan, J
    GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2002, 29 (20)
  • [20] Interannual Covariation of the North American and African Summer Monsoons
    Luo, Weijian
    Weng, Jinwen
    Luo, Jianzhou
    Wang, Lei
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY, 2024, 44 (15) : 5500 - 5519