Abstract

The beginning of the mid-Brunhes event ca. 430 ka coincided with the largest-amplitude change in d 18 O in the global ocean over the past 6 m.y. This large d 18 O change recorded a major ice-sheet expansion that cannot be explained by small changes in orbital forcing. Our recent studies at Ocean Drilling Program Site 1143 from the South China Sea show that this large d 18 O change was preceded by a significant negative d 13 C shift. A global survey of long deep-sea records has revealed periodic d 13 Cmax episodes (i.e., maximum positive values of d 13 C), and both major ice-sheet expansion events in the Pleistocene (the mid-Brunhes event and the middle Pleistocene revolution) were preceded by d 13 Cmax ep- isodes followed by negative d 13 C shifts. This new finding suggests that disturbance in carbon reservoirs leads to major growth of ice-sheet size and challenges the prevalent concept of Arctic control of glacial cycles. Because Earth is now passing again through a d 13 Cmax episode, it is crucial to understand the causal relationship between the successive d 13 C changes and ice-sheet growth events.

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