Global-scale abrupt climate events and black swans; an ice-core-derived palaeoclimate perspective from Earth's highest mountains
Global-scale abrupt climate events and black swans; an ice-core-derived palaeoclimate perspective from Earth's highest mountains (in The Himalayan cryosphere; past and present, N. C. Pant (editor), Rasik Ravindra (editor), D. Srivastava (editor) and L. G. Thompson (editor))
Special Publication - Geological Society of London (September 2017) 462 (1): 7-22
- aerosols
- alpine environment
- Andes
- Asia
- atmospheric circulation
- atmospheric precipitation
- Bolivia
- Cenozoic
- chemical composition
- China
- clastic sediments
- climate change
- concentration
- decadal variations
- deglaciation
- drought
- dust
- El Nino
- El Nino Southern Oscillation
- elevation
- Far East
- glacial geology
- glaciers
- global
- global change
- ground water
- Himalayas
- Holocene
- ice caps
- ice cores
- ice fields
- intertropical convergence zone
- ions
- isotope ratios
- isotopes
- mountains
- O-18/O-16
- oxygen
- Pacific region
- paleoclimatology
- Peru
- provenance
- Quaternary
- sea-surface temperature
- sediments
- South America
- stable isotopes
- temporal distribution
- terrestrial environment
- transport
- tropical environment
- upper Holocene
- Xizang China
- teleconnections
High-elevation tropical glaciers provide records of past climate from which current changes can be assessed. Comparisons among three ice-core records from tropical mountains on opposite sides of the Pacific Ocean reveal how climatic events are linked through large-scale processes such as El Nino-Southern Oscillation. Two distinctive trans-Pacific events in the mid-fourteenth and late-eighteenth centuries are distinguished by elevated aerosol concentrations in cores from the Peruvian Andes and the Tibetan Himalaya. Today aerosol sources for these areas are enhanced by droughts accompanying El Ninos. In both locations, large-scale atmospheric circulation supports aerosol transport from likely source regions. Oxygen isotopic ratios from the ice cores are significantly linked with tropical Pacific sea-surface temperatures, especially in the NINO3.4 region. The arid periods in the fourteenth and eighteenth centuries reflect droughts that were possibly connected to strong and/or persistent El Nino conditions and Intertropical Convergence Zone migration. These 'black swans' are contemporaneous with climate-related population disruptions. Recent warming, particularly at high elevations, is posing a threat to tropical glaciers, many of which have been retreating at unprecedented rates over the last several thousand years. The diminishing ice in these alpine regions endangers water resources for populations in South Asia and South America.