The 8.2 ka event was a period of abrupt cooling of 1–3 °C across large parts of the Northern Hemisphere, which lasted for about 160 yr. The original hypothesis for the cause of this event has been the outburst of the proglacial Lakes Agassiz and Ojibway. These drained into the Labrador Sea in ∼0.5–5 yr and slowed the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, thus cooling the North Atlantic region. However, climate models have not been able to reproduce the duration and magnitude of the cooling with this forcing without including additional centennial-length freshwater forcings, such as rerouting of continental runoff and ice sheet melt in combination with the lake release. Here, we show that instead of being caused by the lake outburst, ...
The 8.2 ka event was the last deglacial abrupt climate event. A reduction in the Atlantic meridional...
A cold event at around 8200 calendar years BP and the release, at around that time, of a huge freshw...
Freshwater perturbations are often thought to be associated with abrupt climate changes during the l...
A century-long cooling of the Northern Hemisphere, caused by accelerated melting of the North Americ...
A significant reduction in the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation and rapid northern Hemisph...
RFI is funded by NERC grant #NE/K008536/1. Numerical climate model simulations made use of the N8 HP...
The cold climate anomaly about 8200 years ago is investigated with CLIMBER-2, a coupled atmosphere-o...
Collapse of ice sheets can cause significant sea level rise and widespread climate change. We examin...
Recent research suggested that the deglaciation of an ice saddle connecting three ice domes around H...
The collapse of the Laurentide Ice Sheet over Hudson Bay ∼8.47 ka allowed the rapid drainage of glac...
The last deglaciation (21 to 7 thousand years ago) was punctuated by several abrupt meltwater pulses...
The so-called "8.2 ka event" is widely regarded as a major Holocene climate perturbation. It is most...
We investigate the potential role of icebergs in the 8.2 ka climate event, using a coupled climate m...
The cause of a rapid change in Atlantic Ocean circulation and northern cooling at the onset of Heinr...
R.F. Ivanovic acknowledges support from NERC grant NE/K008536/1. Numerical climate model simulations...
The 8.2 ka event was the last deglacial abrupt climate event. A reduction in the Atlantic meridional...
A cold event at around 8200 calendar years BP and the release, at around that time, of a huge freshw...
Freshwater perturbations are often thought to be associated with abrupt climate changes during the l...
A century-long cooling of the Northern Hemisphere, caused by accelerated melting of the North Americ...
A significant reduction in the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation and rapid northern Hemisph...
RFI is funded by NERC grant #NE/K008536/1. Numerical climate model simulations made use of the N8 HP...
The cold climate anomaly about 8200 years ago is investigated with CLIMBER-2, a coupled atmosphere-o...
Collapse of ice sheets can cause significant sea level rise and widespread climate change. We examin...
Recent research suggested that the deglaciation of an ice saddle connecting three ice domes around H...
The collapse of the Laurentide Ice Sheet over Hudson Bay ∼8.47 ka allowed the rapid drainage of glac...
The last deglaciation (21 to 7 thousand years ago) was punctuated by several abrupt meltwater pulses...
The so-called "8.2 ka event" is widely regarded as a major Holocene climate perturbation. It is most...
We investigate the potential role of icebergs in the 8.2 ka climate event, using a coupled climate m...
The cause of a rapid change in Atlantic Ocean circulation and northern cooling at the onset of Heinr...
R.F. Ivanovic acknowledges support from NERC grant NE/K008536/1. Numerical climate model simulations...
The 8.2 ka event was the last deglacial abrupt climate event. A reduction in the Atlantic meridional...
A cold event at around 8200 calendar years BP and the release, at around that time, of a huge freshw...
Freshwater perturbations are often thought to be associated with abrupt climate changes during the l...