Persistent link between solar activity and Greenland climate during the Last Glacial Maximum

  • Adolphi, Florian
  • Muscheler, Raimund
  • Svensson, Anders
  • Aldahan, Ala
  • Possnert, Göran
  • Beer, Jürg
  • Sjolte, Jesper
  • Björck, Svante
  • Matthes, Katja
  • Thieblemont, Remi
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Publication date
September 2014
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Abstract

Changes in solar activity have previously been proposed to cause decadal- to millennial-scale fluctuations in both the modern and Holocene climates1. Direct observational records of solar activity, such as sunspot numbers, exist for only the past few hundred years, so solar variability for earlier periods is typically reconstructed from measurements of cosmogenic radionuclides such as 10Be and 14C from ice cores and tree rings2, 3. Here we present a high-resolution 10Be record from the ice core collected from central Greenland by the Greenland Ice Core Project (GRIP). The record spans from 22,500 to 10,000 years ago, and is based on new and compiled data4, 5, 6. Using 14C records7, 8 to control for climate-related influences on 10Be deposit...

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