International audience[1] A detailed record of planktic delta(18)O from a sediment core in the Sulu Sea, located between the South China Sea and the western Pacific warm pool, reveals that for the past 400 kyr (1 kyr = 1000 years), delta(18)O variability on orbital timescales is similar to that caused by changes in ice volume alone. This result indicates that in the Sulu Sea, temperature-driven changes in planktic delta(18)O on orbital times scales were generally compensated for by the effects of sea level and changes in seasonal monsoon intensity on the local freshwater budget, as well as by other changes in the tropical hydrologic cycle and their attendant effects on surface water delta(18)O. Increased freshening of the western tropical P...
Here we present an improved astronomical timescale since 5 Ma as recorded in the ODP Site 1143 in th...
International audienceThe primary productivity dynamics of the last 200,000 years in the Sulu Sea wa...
The surface ocean in the western equatorial Pacific contains some of the warmest water on the planet...
International audience[1] A detailed record of planktic delta(18)O from a sediment core in the Sulu ...
International audience[1] We have generated a new high-resolution record of variations in planktonic...
The response of the East Asian winter monsoon variability to orbital forcing is still unclear, and h...
[1] We have generated a new high-resolution record of variations in planktonic foraminiferal oxygen ...
The onset of Northern Hemisphere Glaciation (NHG) ~2.7 Ma ago coincided with prominent climate chang...
The tropical Pacific is a significant component of the ocean's climate system and a source of consid...
The geographic location of the Sulu Sea in the far western equatorial Pacific results in the basin’s...
The El Niño/Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is the leading mode of interannual climate variability. Howe...
The presence of multiple physical mechanisms at play throughout the Late Pleistocene makes it diffic...
Based on the study of 10 sediment cores and 40 core-top samples from the South China Sea (SCS) we ob...
EXTRACT (SEE PDF FOR FULL ABSTRACT): A high resolution, AMS carbon-14-dated sediment record from ...
Reconstructions of subtropical southwest Pacific climate variability over the Pleistocene were deriv...
Here we present an improved astronomical timescale since 5 Ma as recorded in the ODP Site 1143 in th...
International audienceThe primary productivity dynamics of the last 200,000 years in the Sulu Sea wa...
The surface ocean in the western equatorial Pacific contains some of the warmest water on the planet...
International audience[1] A detailed record of planktic delta(18)O from a sediment core in the Sulu ...
International audience[1] We have generated a new high-resolution record of variations in planktonic...
The response of the East Asian winter monsoon variability to orbital forcing is still unclear, and h...
[1] We have generated a new high-resolution record of variations in planktonic foraminiferal oxygen ...
The onset of Northern Hemisphere Glaciation (NHG) ~2.7 Ma ago coincided with prominent climate chang...
The tropical Pacific is a significant component of the ocean's climate system and a source of consid...
The geographic location of the Sulu Sea in the far western equatorial Pacific results in the basin’s...
The El Niño/Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is the leading mode of interannual climate variability. Howe...
The presence of multiple physical mechanisms at play throughout the Late Pleistocene makes it diffic...
Based on the study of 10 sediment cores and 40 core-top samples from the South China Sea (SCS) we ob...
EXTRACT (SEE PDF FOR FULL ABSTRACT): A high resolution, AMS carbon-14-dated sediment record from ...
Reconstructions of subtropical southwest Pacific climate variability over the Pleistocene were deriv...
Here we present an improved astronomical timescale since 5 Ma as recorded in the ODP Site 1143 in th...
International audienceThe primary productivity dynamics of the last 200,000 years in the Sulu Sea wa...
The surface ocean in the western equatorial Pacific contains some of the warmest water on the planet...