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Teleconnection mechanism between millennial-scale Asian Monsoon dynamics and North Atlantic climate
Kana Nagashima and Ryuji Tada
PAGES news
20(2)
64-65
2012
Kana Nagashima1 and Ryuji Tada2
We present evidence for millennial-scale changes of the westerly jet path over East Asia during the last glacial period and suggest that the westerly jet plays a critical role in a millennial-scale climate teleconnection between Asia and the North Atlantic.
The δ18O records of stalagmites from the Hulu Cave in southeastern China (Wang et al. 2001) and the grayscale profile of hemipelagic sediments from the Japan Sea (Tada 2004; Tada et al. 1999; core MD01-2407) show millennial-scale variations in East Asian Summer Monsoon (EASM) rainfall along the Yangtze River (Fig. 1) in association with Dansgaard-Oeschger (D-O) events (Fig. 2). Moreover, annual-resolution studies of a Greenland ice core suggest that decreases in the eolian dust flux from mid-latitude Asian deserts approximately coincided with or even led the temperature rises at the onsets of the Bølling-Allerød, the Pre-Boreal, and a prominent D-O interstadial (Steffensen et al. 2008; Thomas et al. 2009). These findings suggest a direct linkage of millennial-scale climate changes between Asia and the North Atlantic. However, the dynamics of such a teleconnection remains unresolved.
Here we focus on the westerly jet because of its high potential to link climate changes between East Asia and the North Atlantic. At present, the westerly jet axis over East Asia passes south of the Himalayas during winter and early spring, and then jumps to north of the Tibetan Plateau in late spring to early summer in association with intensified Hadley Cell circulation (Schiemann et al. 2009). Wang et al. (2011) proposed that for a summer monsoon rainband to develop along the Yangtze River, the westerly jet needs to be at or slightly north of the river's latitude during summer. This mechanism is well explained by Sampe and Xie (2010). They demonstrated that eastward advection of warm air from the eastern flank of the Tibetan Plateau along the westerly jet axis triggers the convection that forms the rainband. They further showed that the westerly jet anchors the rainband by steering transient weather disturbances, which promote convection by intensifying moisture advection with upward motion. Over the North Atlantic, the westerly jet also steers transient eddies that bring precipitation, and its path is largely controlled by the sea-ice extent and meridional gradient of sea surface temperature (Laîné et al. 2009). By analogy with the present close linkage of the westerly jet path with the positions of both the EASM rainband and weather fronts in the North Atlantic, we infer that dynamic changes in the westerly jet path may have played a critical role in linking millennial-scale changes in EASM precipitation and North Atlantic climate during the last glacial (Fang et al. 1999; Tada 2004). Supporting this inference, productivity changes of the western Mediterranean Sea estimated from geochemical proxies of marine sediments (Moreno et al. 2004, 2005) suggest westerly jet path changes over the North Atlantic in association with D-O events. However, millennial-scale changes of the westerly jet path over East Asia have not yet been demonstrated. Here we introduce the result of our recent study that reconstructed variations in the westerly jet path over East Asia during the last glacial by examining the provenance and grain size of Asian dust in a sediment core from the Japan Sea (Nagashima et al. 2011).
Dust provenance reflects seasonal shifts of the westerly jet
Nagashima et al. (2011) demonstrated that the relative abundance of Asian dust emitted from two major Asian deserts, the Taklimakan Desert and the Gobi Desert in southern Mongolia (hereafter, Mongolian Gobi) reflects changes in the seasonal northward movement of the westerly jet axis. At present, dust emission events in both these deserts are most frequent in spring because the large temperature gradient between high and middle latitudes and the resulting synoptic-scale disturbance in the atmospheric circulation generates strong cold fronts that give rise to storms (Roe 2009). In spring, severe dust storms are approximately twice as frequent in the Mongolian Gobi as in the Taklimakan (Kurosaki and Mikami 2005; Sun et al. 2001) because the Mongolian Gobi lies along the main pathway of cold air masses from Siberia. In this season, the emitted dust is transported eastward mostly by near-surface northwesterly winds. During summer, however, the latitudinal temperature gradient is smaller, suppressing storm event frequency in the Gobi (Roe 2009), whereas dust emission event frequency remains high in the Taklimakan (Kurosaki and Mikami 2005) because of the local circulation system between the desert and high surrounding mountains (Abe et al. 2005). When winds blowing against the northern margin of the Tibetan Plateau lift the dust above 5000 m, the emitted dust can be entrained into the westerly jet, which is north of the plateau during summer, and transported long distances. Thus, the relative abundance of dust from the Taklimakan versus the Mongolian Gobi mainly reflects the relative frequency of summer versus spring-type dust events. Since spring-type dust events cease once the westerly jet jumps to the north of the Tibetan Plateau (Nagashima et al. 2011), changes in the relative abundance of dust derived from these two deserts record the timing of this northward jump. This idea led us to reconstruct the changes in the provenance of dust from the Asian continent in sediment core MD01-2407 (37°04'00''N, 134°42'11''E) from the south-central Japan Sea (Fig. 1) by using the electron spin resonance (ESR) signal intensity of quartz (for details, see Nagashima et al. 2007; Sun et al. 2007).
Millennial-scale teleconnection via the westerly jet
Hemipelagic sediments in the Japan Sea are characterized by alternating dark and light layers; light layers were deposited during D-O stadials and dark layers during D-O interstadials (Tada 2004; Tada et al. 1999; Fig. 2C). The ESR signal intensities of silt-sized (eolian) quartz (Nagashima et al. 2007) in samples from core MD01-2407 ranged between values of 6.6-9.2 for Taklimakan and 12.0-13.6 for Mongolian Gobi (Nagashima et al. 2011). Lower ESR signal intensities (larger contribution from the Taklimakan Desert) clearly correspond to dark layers (D-O interstadials) and higher intensities (larger contribution from the Mongolian Gobi) to light layers (D-O stadials) (Fig. 2C, E). These inferred differences in dust provenance between dark and light layers are supported by the smaller median diameter of the silt fraction within the dark layers (Fig. 2D). Eolian grain size decreases with increasing distance from the source, and the Taklimakan Desert is more distant from the Japan Sea than the Mongolian Gobi; thus, the median grain size of eolian dust from the Taklimakan is smaller than that from the Mongolian Gobi. The dominance of dust from the Taklimakan in D-O interstadials suggests that the westerly jet jumped to the north of the Tibetan Plateau earlier during interstadials, favoring the development of a rainband along the Yangtze River during summer (Sampe and Xie 2010). Therefore, a northerly migration of the westerly jet path over East Asia can explain the increased precipitation over the Yangtze River during D-O interstadials (Fig. 2B), and also links millennial-scale changes in the EASM with those in the North Atlantic climate.
Oxygen isotope records of speleothems from the southwestern United States also suggest a northward shift of the polar jet during D-O interstadials (Asmerom et al. 2010). Furthermore, speleothem growth patterns in northeastern Brazil (Wang et al. 2004) and the chemical composition of Lake Malawi (East Africa) sediments (Brown et al. 2007) reveal a northward shift of the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) during D-O interstadials over these respective regions. Taken together, these results suggest that a dynamic N-S displacement of the atmospheric circulation pattern (the westerly jet at mid-latitudes and the ITCZ at low latitudes) may almost simultaneously propagate D-O events on hemispheric and inter-hemispheric scales.
affiliations
1Research Institute for Global Change, Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, Yokosuka, Japan; nagashimakjamstec.go.jp
2Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Graduate School of Science, University of Tokyo, Japan
Selected references
Full reference list online under: http://pastglobalchanges.org/products/newsletters/ref2012_2.pdf
Nagashima K et al. (2011) Journal of Asian Earth Sciences 40: 1214-1220
Sampe T and Xie S-P (2010) Journal of Climate 23: 113-134
Sun Y et al. (2007) Atmospheric Environment 41: 8537-8548
Wang C, Liang X-Z, Samel AN (2011) Journal of Climate 24: 2116-2133