THE ASTRONOMICAL THEORY OF CLIMATE AND THE AGE OF THE BRUNHES-MATUYAMA MAGNETIC REVERSAL

被引:807
作者
BASSINOT, FC
LABEYRIE, LD
VINCENT, E
QUIDELLEUR, X
SHACKLETON, NJ
LANCELOT, Y
机构
[1] GODWIN LAB, DEPT QUATERNARY RES, CAMBRIDGE CB2 3RS, ENGLAND
[2] CNRS, GEOL QUATERNAIRE LAB, F-13288 MARSEILLE 9, FRANCE
[3] INST PHYS GLOBE, PALEOMAGNET LAB, F-75252 PARIS 05, FRANCE
关键词
D O I
10.1016/0012-821X(94)90244-5
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
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 deltaO-18 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 deltaO-18 record from core MD900963 are in excellent agreement with climatic oscillations predicted by the astronomical theory of climate. Our deltaO-18 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 deltaO-18 reference record by stacking and tuning the deltaO-18 records from core MD900963 and site 677 to orbital forcing functions.
引用
收藏
页码:91 / 108
页数:18
相关论文
共 36 条