CLIMATE CHANGE AND COASTAL HYDROGRAPHIC RESPONSE ALONG THE ATLANTIC IBERIAN MARGIN (TAGUS PRODELTA AND MUROS RIA) DURING THE LAST TWO MILLENNIA

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dc.contributor.author Lebreiro S.M.
dc.contributor.author FrancEs G.
dc.contributor.author Abrantes F.F.G.
dc.contributor.author Diz P.
dc.contributor.author Bartels-JOnsdOttir H.B.
dc.contributor.author Stroynowski Z.N.
dc.contributor.author Gil I.M.
dc.contributor.author Pena L.D.
dc.contributor.author Rodrigues T.
dc.contributor.author Jones P.D.
dc.contributor.author Nombela M.A.
dc.contributor.author Alejo I.
dc.contributor.author Briffa K.R.
dc.contributor.author Harris I.
dc.contributor.author Grimalt J.O.
dc.date.accessioned 2025-05-02T03:57:56Z
dc.date.available 2025-05-02T03:57:56Z
dc.date.issued 2006
dc.identifier https://elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=11525842
dc.identifier.citation The Holocene, 2006, 16, 7, 1003-1015
dc.identifier.issn 0959-6836
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/49132
dc.description.abstract The Tagus Prodelta (W Portugal) and the Muros RIa (NW Spain) are areas of high deposition rates registering high-resolution palaeoclimatic records for western Iberia. We compare the climatic conditions of the two areas over the last two millennia based on proxies of temperature (sea surface temperatures and oxygen isotopes), continental input (grain size, iron and magnetic susceptibility) and productivity (inorganic and organic carbon, carbon isotopes, benthic foraminifera and diatoms). Biogeochemical changes in the Tagus Prodelta reflect widely recognized North Atlantic climatic periods encompassing the Roman Period (AD 0-350), the Dark Ages (AD 400-700), the ‘Mediaeval Warm Period’ (MWP; AD 800-1200) and the ‘Little Ice Age’ (LIA; AD 1300-1750). The atmospheric North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) drives the Tagus Prodelta multidecadal, long-term variability in precipitation-river input during cold periods (negative NAO) and marine upwelling during warmer periods (positive NAO), a scheme that is reversed in the Galician region. The Muros RIa shows only local hydrodynamics until AD 1150, including a ‘suboxic’ event in the inner RIa around AD 500-700. Since AD 1150 Atlantic warm upwelled waters have ventilated the outer RIa but only reach the inner RIa at AD 1750. The twentieth-century records are also interpreted as a reflex of the inverse NAO mode in both areas, resulting in amplification of the LIA biogeochemical water conditions. Centennial-scale solar activity appears to be another important forcing mechanism (or the only one, if solar activity drives the NAO and ‘Bond-cycles’) behind changes in the hydrography of the Tagus Prodelta, and primary production, bottom ventilation and organic carbon degradation in the Muros RIa.
dc.subject IBERIA
dc.subject TAGUS RIVER
dc.subject MUROS RIA
dc.subject NAO
dc.subject 'MEDIAEVAL WARM PERIOD'
dc.subject 'LITTLE ICE AGE'
dc.subject HYDROGRAPHIC CHANGE
dc.subject CLIMATIC CHANGE
dc.subject HOLSMEER PROJECT
dc.title CLIMATE CHANGE AND COASTAL HYDROGRAPHIC RESPONSE ALONG THE ATLANTIC IBERIAN MARGIN (TAGUS PRODELTA AND MUROS RIA) DURING THE LAST TWO MILLENNIA
dc.type Статья
dc.identifier.doi 10.1177/0959683606hl990rp


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