Different trends in Antarctic temperature and atmospheric CO2 during the
last glacial
Abstract
Using Antarctic ice-core records, we determine for each Antarctic
Isotope Maximum (AIM) of Marine Isotope Stage 3 (MIS-3: ca. 28,000 to
59,000 years before present) the rates and durations of warming and
atmospheric CO2 rise. We find that the AIM warming rates
significantly decrease as the climate cools from early to late MIS-3. In
contrast, the rate of CO2 rise during AIMs shows no
significant trend across this interval. We further find that the AIM
warming rate is not sensitive to Heinrich (H) events, contrasting with
CO2, which rises for significantly longer time (compared
to the temperature rise) during AIMs which coincide with H events. These
distinct Antarctic temperature and CO2 responses to
varying background climate and H events challenge the view that
millennial-scale CO2 and Antarctic temperature changes
are dominated by the same physical processes, suggesting an important
contribution of low-to-mid-latitude processes to the CO2
rises.