The 8.2 ka event was triggered by a meltwater pulse (MWP) into the North Atlantic and resultant reduction of the thermohaline circulation (THC). This event was preceded by a series of at least 14 MWPs; their impact on early Holocene climate has remained almost unknown. A set of high-quality paleoclimate records from across the Northern Hemisphere shows evidence for a widespread and significant climatic anomaly at ∼9.2 ka B.P. This event has climatic anomaly patterns very similar to the 8.2 ka B.P. event, cooling occurred at high latitudes and midlatitudes and drying took place in the northern tropics, and is concurrent with an MWP of considerable volume (∼8100 km3). As the 9.2 ka MWP occurs at a time of enhanced baseline freshwater flow int...
The Earth\u27s climate has undergone a global transition over the past four million years, from warm...
The 8.2 ka climate event is the most significant North Atlantic cooling event during the Holocene. F...
International audienceThe quantitative reconstruction of climatic parameters from pollen and lake-le...
The 8.2 ka event was triggered by a meltwater pulse (MWP) into the North Atlantic and resultant redu...
7 [1] The 8.2 ka event was triggered by a meltwater pulse (MWP) into the North Atlantic and resultan...
The extent of climate variability during the current interglacial period, the Holocene, is still deb...
This paper is a review of studies of abrupt climate changes (ACCs) during the Holocene published dur...
We review paleoceanographic and paleoclimatic records from the northern North Atlantic to assess the...
We review paleoceanographic and paleoclimatic records from the northern North Atlantic to assess the...
Seven freshwater perturbation experiments were performed with a global atmosphere-sea-ice-ocean mode...
This study explores the role of thermohaline circulation (THC) in climate change, based upon the res...
The abrupt global cooling centred on 8200 cal yr BP was the most significant and abrupt climatic det...
International audienceAn outstanding climate anomaly 8200 years before the present (B.P.) in the Nor...
The present interglacial, the Holocene, spans the period of the last 11,700 years. It has sustained ...
The `8.2 ka climate event' is believed to have been driven by meltwater pulses draining into the Nor...
The Earth\u27s climate has undergone a global transition over the past four million years, from warm...
The 8.2 ka climate event is the most significant North Atlantic cooling event during the Holocene. F...
International audienceThe quantitative reconstruction of climatic parameters from pollen and lake-le...
The 8.2 ka event was triggered by a meltwater pulse (MWP) into the North Atlantic and resultant redu...
7 [1] The 8.2 ka event was triggered by a meltwater pulse (MWP) into the North Atlantic and resultan...
The extent of climate variability during the current interglacial period, the Holocene, is still deb...
This paper is a review of studies of abrupt climate changes (ACCs) during the Holocene published dur...
We review paleoceanographic and paleoclimatic records from the northern North Atlantic to assess the...
We review paleoceanographic and paleoclimatic records from the northern North Atlantic to assess the...
Seven freshwater perturbation experiments were performed with a global atmosphere-sea-ice-ocean mode...
This study explores the role of thermohaline circulation (THC) in climate change, based upon the res...
The abrupt global cooling centred on 8200 cal yr BP was the most significant and abrupt climatic det...
International audienceAn outstanding climate anomaly 8200 years before the present (B.P.) in the Nor...
The present interglacial, the Holocene, spans the period of the last 11,700 years. It has sustained ...
The `8.2 ka climate event' is believed to have been driven by meltwater pulses draining into the Nor...
The Earth\u27s climate has undergone a global transition over the past four million years, from warm...
The 8.2 ka climate event is the most significant North Atlantic cooling event during the Holocene. F...
International audienceThe quantitative reconstruction of climatic parameters from pollen and lake-le...