The mechanisms responsible for millennial scale climate change within glacial time intervals are equivocal. Here we show that all eight known radiometrically-dated Tambora-sized or larger NH eruptions over the interval 30 to 80 ka BP are associated with abrupt Greenland cooling (>95% confidence). Additionally, previous research reported a strong statistical correlation between the timing of Southern Hemisphere volcanism and Dansgaard-Oeschger (DO) events (>99% confidence), but did not identify a causative mechanism. Volcanic aerosol-induced asymmetrical hemispheric cooling over the last few hundred years restructured atmospheric circulation in a similar fashion as that associated with Last Glacial millennial-scale shifts (albeit on a smaller scale). We hypothesise that following both recent and Last Glacial NH eruptions, volcanogenic sulphate injections into the stratosphere cooled the NH preferentially, inducing a hemispheric temperature asymmetry that shifted atmospheric circulation cells southward. This resulted in Greenland cooling, Antarctic warming, and a southward shifted ITCZ. However, during the Last Glacial, the initial eruption-induced climate response was prolonged by NH glacier and sea ice expansion, increased NH albedo, AMOC weakening, more NH cooling, and a consequent positive feedback. Conversely, preferential SH cooling following large SH eruptions shifted atmospheric circulation to the north, resulting in the characteristic features of DO events.
The mechanisms responsible for millennial scale climate change within glacial time intervals are equivocal. Here we show that all eight known radiometrically-dated Tambora-sized or larger NH eruptions over the interval 30 to 80 ka BP are associated with abrupt Greenland cooling (>95% confidence). Additionally, previous research reported a strong statistical correlation between the timing of Southern Hemisphere volcanism and Dansgaard-Oeschger (DO) events (>99% confidence), but did not identify a causative mechanism. Volcanic aerosol-induced asymmetrical hemispheric cooling over the last few hundred years restructured atmospheric circulation in a similar fashion as that associated with Last Glacial millennial-scale shifts (albeit on a smaller scale). We hypothesise that following both recent and Last Glacial NH eruptions, volcanogenic sulphate injections into the stratosphere cooled the NH preferentially, inducing a hemispheric temperature asymmetry that shifted atmospheric circulation cells southward. This resulted in Greenland cooling, Antarctic warming, and a southward shifted ITCZ. However, during the Last Glacial, the initial eruption-induced climate response was prolonged by NH glacier and sea ice expansion, increased NH albedo, AMOC weakening, more NH cooling, and a consequent positive feedback. Conversely, preferential SH cooling following large SH eruptions shifted atmospheric circulation to the north, resulting in the characteristic features of DO events.
Millennial scale climate change is one of the most characteristic and yet enigmatic
features of recent glacial intervals. From 30 to 80 ka BP, glacial baseline
conditions were interrupted by 21 abrupt climate change events, termed
Dansgaard-Oeschger (DO) events, associated with warm interstadial conditions in
Greenland but colder conditions in Antarctica. The apparent temperature shifts were
locally dramatic; for example, DO Event 8 (DO-8) occurred 38.17 ka BP, and
was characterised by 11.8 °C Greenland warming1,
which is comparable to warming across a full glacial-interglacial transition.
Additionally, evidence from high resolution Greenland ice cores suggests that Greenland
warming can occur extremely rapidly, potentially within 1 to 3 years2.
Any explanation for DO events must therefore account for both the rapidity and magnitude
of the observed temperature change. Similarly, any cause must also explain the apparent
hemispheric asymmetry characteristic of DO events; Greenland warming was associated with
Antarctic cooling3, a phenomenon known as the ‘bipolar
see-saw’3. The hemispheric asymmetry is not restricted to
high latitudes. Increasing speleothem-based evidence indicates that DO events were
associated with substantial atmospheric reorganisation at low latitudes, with a
strengthening of the East Asian Summer Monsoon (EASM) system45 in the
Northern Hemisphere (NH) and a weakening of the South American Monsoon (SAM) and the
Australasian Monsoon (AM) in the Southern Hemisphere (SH)67.
Explanations for the asymmetric hemispheric response to DO events often invoke Atlantic
Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) shifts possibly induced by meltwater
pulses789, but this interpretation is not universally accepted,
and other proposed explanations include solar forcing10, internal
ocean-atmosphere oscillations11, and volcanism12. Because
the substantial climate shifts associated with DO event initiation can seemingly occur
on human timescales, identifying the underlying cause of such abrupt climate change and
considering these forcings in a modern context is critical.Here we use published ice core (synchronised on the AICC2012 chronology13), volcanological, and speleothem-based evidence to argue that DO events were
triggered by asymmetrical hemispheric cooling caused by explosive SH volcanic eruptions.
Conversely, we argue that very large NH eruptions forced abrupt Greenland cooling events
and, under the right conditions, were associated with large ice rafting events (Heinrich
Stadials). This perspective is consistent with recent results suggesting that ice
rafting events were a consequence of, but did not trigger, NH cooling14.
Large explosive volcanic eruptions are conventionally thought to result in global
cooling for several years following the eruption, based on the concept that
stratospheric volcanogenic sulphate aerosols reflect solar radiation and cool the planet
essentially uniformly. Large low latitude eruptions are therefore often considered the
most climatologically significant because low latitudes receive a disproportionately
high amount of insolation15, although in-depth studies highlight
considerable complexities in the climate response to eruptions based on ejecta volume,
sulphate content, explosivity, and latitude1617 (see Supplementary Information). However, global cooling
does not seem to have occurred following several large, well-documented Pleistocene
eruptions. For example, the Toba supereruption at ~74 ka BP is
followed by lower NGRIP δ18O (Greenland cooling) but higher
EDML δ18O values (Antarctic warming), thereby providing no
support for homogeneous global cooling18. Similarly, evidence from Lake
Malawi in east Africa does not show any evidence for substantial cooling at low
latitudes19. The apparent absence of ‘volcanic
winter’ in response to the largest eruption of the Quaternary is enigmatic
when considered from the conventional perspective. Similarly puzzling is the apparent
strengthening of the SAM and AM and concomitant weakening of the EASM coinciding with
the Toba eruption (Fig. 1).
Figure 1
Low latitude atmospheric circulation and high latitude temperature records
spanning the time interval during which the 74 ka Toba
super-eruption occurred.
(a) The NGRIP ice core δ18O record,
(b) the SC03 stalagmite δ18O record
from Secret Cave, Gunung Mulu National Park, Borneo32,
(c) the El Condor Cave (ELC) stalagmite
δ18O record from northern Peru6, and (d) the EDML δ18O record from
Antarctica33. The records are arranged by latitude. The
grey box indicates the timing of the Toba supereruption at
73.72 ka BP. The ice core records are synchronised on the
AICC2012 timescale, and both stalagmite records are dated independently
using 230Th dating.
However, very recent research focussing on the last 500 years has demonstrated the
importance of asymmetric hemispheric cooling induced by sulphate aerosol injections2021 on atmospheric circulation. Observational, modelling, and proxy
studies now firmly implicate 20th Century anthropogenic sulphate aerosol
emissions with greater NH cooling compared to the SH, resulting in southward migration
of the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ), drying at NH low latitudes, and more
rainfall at SH low latitudes2223. Recent research also demonstrates
that this same asymmetric cooling effect occurred following the injection of sulphate
aerosols into the stratosphere following large volcanic eruptions over the last 100
years (based on instrumental data)20 and 500 years (based on stalagmite
rainfall proxy data)21. These studies collectively demonstrate that over
the last few centuries NH aerosols (volcanogenic and anthropogenic) forced the ITCZ to
the south by cooling the NH relative to the SH, and that SH eruptions forced northward
ITCZ migration. The atmospheric and temperature response associated with the Toba
eruption is therefore consistent with the recently detected climate response to more
recent (but far smaller) NH eruptions. We suggest that the Toba eruption initiated
southward ITCZ migration by inducing a NH-SH temperature asymmetry, which resulted in
more SAM rainfall but reduced rainfall in the NH low latitudes (e.g., the EASM),
consistent with speleothem-based evidence (Fig. 1), and identical
to the response to NH eruptions over the last 500 years. A southward displaced ITCZ
would have shifted Hadley circulation cells to the south, compressing the SH Polar Cell,
forcing the SH Polar Front southward, and resulting in locally warmer Antarctic
temperatures (Supplementary Information).
The opposite response would have occurred in the NH, where atmospheric reorganisation
would have resulted in extreme and sudden cooling in Greenland and extension of NH
glacial and sea ice, characteristics associated with the abrupt transition between DO-20
and Greenland Stadial (GS) 20 occurring at that time. We propose that the positive
feedbacks following NH eruptions (e.g., NH sea ice expansion, NH continental glacier
expansion, increased NH albedo, and AMOC weakening) prolonged the climatic response to
the Toba eruption by several hundred years, not dissimilar to recent results suggesting
that Little Ice Age cooling was initiated by NH volcanism in the 13th
Century but was sustained over hundreds of years by a positive feedback involving sea
ice and oceanic circulation24. The timing of the Toba supereruption is
consistent with the abrupt cooling into GS20, although this seems superimposed on a
cooling trend that began ~100 years earlier, potentially linked to
decreasing insolation. However, the Toba eruption is nearly indistinguishable from the
inception of Antarctic warming (Figs 1 and 2) (Supplementary Information). We
suggest that large NH eruptions that occurred during interstadials abruptly ended
Greenland interstadial conditions and promoted a rapid transition to stadial conditions,
which were favoured during much of the Last Glacial because of low atmospheric
greenhouse gas concentrations and insolation conditions. Conversely, large NH eruptions
that occurred during already cold conditions resulted in less Greenland cooling but led
to glacier extension and Heinrich Events. This is supported by the established
association of the 39.280 ± 0.110 ka BP
Campanian Ignimbrite supereruption of the Campi Flegrei supervolcano with GS9 and
Heinrich Event 4 (HE4)25. We also note that the inception of HE5a at
~53 ka BP is indistinguishable from the timing of the magnitude
(M) 7 Ischia eruption (53 ± 3.3 ka BP).
Additionally, all eight very large (M ≥ 7;
Tambora-sized or larger) Pleistocene NH eruptions (see Supplementary Information for selection criteria used)
are within error of a NH cooling event (Fig. 3), and Monte Carlo
simulations demonstrate that this relationship is significant at the 95% confidence
level (Supplementary Information) (Fig. 4).
Figure 2
Low latitude atmospheric circulation and high latitude temperature records
over the interval 30 to 80 ka BP.
(a) The NGRIP ice core δ18O record34 and integrated summer insolation for 65°N35 with a τ (melting threshold) = 275 W
m−2, (b) the SC03 stalagmite
δ18O record from Secret Cave, Gunung Mulu
National Park, Borneo32, (c)
δ18O records from the El Condor Cave (ELC)
and the Cueva del Diamante (NAR) stalagmites from northern Peru6, and (d) the EDML δ18O
record from Antarctica33. The numbered grey boxes highlight
the timing of DO events. The red circles indicate the timing of the two
highest precision NH volcanic eruptions over this time interval, the
Campanian (Campi Flegrei)25 and Toba18
eruptions. No comparably well-dated SH volcanic eruptions exist over this
time interval. Please see Supplementary Information for the timing of all
radiometrically-dated eruptions over this time interval. Error bars on the
NH eruption dates (2σ) are smaller than the symbols used.
Figure 3
Possible correlations between millennial scale climate shifts and known
volcanic eruptions.
(a) All known very large (M ≥ 7)
NH volcanic eruptions with radiometric ages (red circles) shifted within
error to previously documented rapid cooling events (blue squares).
(b) Known large radiometrically-dated
(M ≥ 6) SH volcanic eruptions (red
circles) shifted within error to previously documented Greenland warming
events (yellow squares). The small grey horizontal arrows in both panels
represent the total shift required to obtain a match to an abrupt climate
event. All eight NH eruptions occur within error of an abrupt Greenland
cooling event, and all five SH eruptions timings are within error of a
warming event. Dashed lines with question marks represent abrupt climate
shifts possibly linked to yet unidentified eruptions. The label
‘Okataina’ at 33.5 ka BP refers to two
distinct eruptions responsible for Okataina Units K and L. The two yellow
circles indicate previously published correlations.
Figure 4
Results of Monte Carlo simulations assessing the significance of the link
between (a) NH and (b) SH eruption age distribution and abrupt climate change
over the interval 30–80 ka BP.
The root-mean-square (RMS) statistic is the summation of the distances
between a set of eruption ages and the nearest abrupt climate change events
(abrupt Greenland cooling events for NH eruptions, and warming events for SH
eruptions) (see Supplementary
Information). A set of eight NH eruption dates was randomly
selected from a uniform distribution ten million times, and a set of five SH
eruptions dates selected ten million times, and the RMS calculated. The blue
frequency distributions illustrate the results of these simulations, and the
vertical red lines illustrate the RMS of the actual eruption ages. The
insets show the cumulative frequency distributions.
The stratospheric sulphate loading associated with large SH eruptions could have had the
opposite effect, preferentially cooling the SH relative to the NH, shifting the ITCZ to
the north, compressing the NH Polar Cell, and shifting the NH Polar Front to the north
(Supplementary Information). We suggest
that this northward shift in the polar fronts in response to large SH eruptions resulted
in dramatic warming across the North Atlantic and NH glaciated regions, promoting sea
ice collapse and the partial retreat of continental ice sheets, all characteristic
features of DO events. The presence of large continental ice sheets would have provided
a strong positive feedback. The proposed northward NH Polar Front migration would have
caused continental ice sheet retreat, consequently reducing albedo, destabilising NH
permafrost, and resulting in subtle methane increases characteristic of DO events26. This is consistent with inferred minor perturbations to the carbon
cycle during DO events26, with the suggestion that atmosphere methane
that accumulated during DO events had a high latitude source27, and with
ice core evidence suggesting a substantial northward shift in methane source region
following DO event initiation28. The flux of radiocarbon-depleted carbon
into the atmosphere during DO events, often interpreted as AMOC strengthening and
increased outgassing of radiocarbon depleted-bottom waters, may also originate from
permafrost thaw, as previously suggested for the
Bølling/Allerød29. The lower albedo and
strengthened AMOC following NH ice sheet decay following SH eruptions could have
produced a positive feedback that prevented the short-term re-establishment of
continental ice sheets to their full glacial extent as favoured by still low atmospheric
CO2 concentrations. This caused a gradual return to pre-eruption
conditions hundreds or even thousands of years after the initial sulphate forcing,
unless the slow process was expedited by a large NH eruption (forcing an abrupt return
to stadial conditions, as was the case following the Toba eruption) or the cooling
process was interrupted by another SH eruption, as may have occurred after an unknown SH
eruption triggered DO-13 at 49.5 ka BP (Fig. 2).Very recent research using ice core data from a high snow accumulation rate site in
Antarctica suggests that that the temperature signal associated with DO events
originated in the NH and was then transmitted to the SH ~200 years later by
oceanic processes30. Interestingly, the authors of the study highlight
the fact that the North Atlantic processes thought to have initiated DO events could
themselves have resulted from a remote and ‘elusive’ trigger. We
propose that this trigger was a SH eruption, which initially cooled the SH for just
1–5 years due to increased atmospheric aerosol loading. Existing proxy
records are too low resolution to detect this initial aerosol-induced cooling, but the
cooling was sufficient to shift atmospheric circulation to the north, warming NH high
latitudes, promoting NH ice sheet decay, strengthening AMOC, and initiating a positive
feedback mechanism. This NH warming could then have been propagated back to the SH
~200 years later, well after the initial volcanic aerosol-induced cooling
effects had abated. NH warming (triggered by a SH eruption) would have resulted in ice
shelf collapse, increased freshwater outputs to the North Atlantic, or reduced sea ice
extent, all previously suggested mechanisms driving DO events3031.
These other processes could have resulted from and amplified the initial volcanic
forcing, possibly by inducing AMOC shifts which were propagated to the south
~200 years later30.We focus on the interval from 30 to 80 ka BP because of the high density of
millennial-scale climate oscillations within that interval, and because the proposed
mechanism would be most effective during intervals of time characterised by intermediate
ice volume and 65°N insolation, such as most of this interval (see Supplementary Information) (Fig. 5). Unfortunately, the volcanological catalogue of known eruptions
prior to 10 ka BP is very incomplete because: (i) erosion removes
volcanic deposits from the geologic record and increases uncertainty associated with the
estimation of eruption magnitude, (ii) burial by younger deposits hides older
deposits from study, and (iii) many volcanoes still remain understudied or even
unknown. Even over only the last one thousand years, instances exist where evidence of
large eruptions is apparent in ice core volcanogenic sulphate records but the volcano
responsible has only recently been identified (e.g., Rinjani, 1257 A.D.) or is still
unknown (e.g., the 1809 A.D. eruption). Prior to the Holocene, large eruptions from SH
calderas are particularly underrepresented (see Supplementary Information).
Figure 5
Global volcanic eruption history over the last 80 ka, based on
data in the LaMEVE database, and ice volume conditions.
(a) Number of Magnitude ≥6 (Pinatubo-sized or larger) NH
and SH eruptions per two millennia from present to 80 ka BP. The
low number of known SH volcanic eruptions prior to the last two ka reflects
a significant undercount in known eruptions. (b) Latitude and ages of
known Magnitude ≥6 volcanic eruptions from present to
80 ka BP36. (c) A histogram of abrupt
Greenland warming events37, the Red Sea sea level
reconstruction (interpreted as reflecting global ice volume)38 (solid black line), and 65°N insolation35
(dashed blue line). Intervals characterised by high ice volume and low
insolation hypothesised as relatively insensitive to SH eruptions are
highlighted in blue; intervals with very low ice volume lacking the positive
feedback required to sufficiently amplify volcanic eruptions are highlighted
in orange.
Despite the apparent undercount and chronological uncertainties, over the interval from
30 to 80 ka BP all five radiometrically-dated large
(M ≥ 6; Pinatubo-sized or larger) SH volcanic
eruptions are within chronological uncertainty of the initiation of a discrete DO event.
Too few radiometrically-dated SH eruptions exist to confidently assess the link with DO
events, but previous research linked direct evidence of SH eruptions derived from
optical dust logger data from Antarctic Siple Dome ice with DO events over the period 27
to 70 ka12. The link between SH volcanism and DO events was
significant at the 99% confidence level, although a well-defined mechanistic link was
absent. We propose that this ‘missing link’ is the now apparent
hemispheric temperature asymmetry induced by stratospheric volcanic aerosols, followed
by an ice/albedo and ocean circulation feedback. Future research should test the
hypothesis further by improve the dating of both climate and volcanological records, and
by using isotope-enabled GCM modelling.This hypothesis not only clarifies the mechanisms that forced abrupt millennial scale
climate change during glacial conditions, but also helps predict future change. Large,
explosive eruptions may indeed lead to low latitude drought in the hemisphere of the
eruption, but our model suggests additional consequences that merit further
consideration. For example, an extremely large NH eruption might cause nearly global
cooling, but may result in localised SH high latitude warming by forcing the SH Polar
Front to the south. A sufficiently large atmospheric disruption could initiate or
accelerate the destabilisation of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet. Paradoxically, very
large eruptions could therefore not only cause substantial mean global cooling, but also
high latitude warming (in the hemisphere opposite the eruption), ice sheet collapse, and
catastrophic sea level rise.
Additional Information
How to cite this article: Baldini, J. U.L. et al. Was millennial scale
climate change during the Last Glacial triggered by explosive volcanism? Sci.
Rep.
5, 17442; doi: 10.1038/srep17442 (2015).
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