Abstract

The regional climate in the Asian subcontinent is highly influenced by the Southwest Monsoon (SWM) and Northeast Monsoon (NEM) during boreal summer and winter, respectively. Although the response of the SWM to the abrupt climatic changes recorded in the Greenland ice core records is well documented, the response of the NEM to the high latitude climate shifts is less well-understood due to the lack of winter monsoon records in the region. Here for the first time, we report the variability of winter cooling in the Arabian Sea and the associated NEM strength over the last ~37 kyr BP using seasonal sea surface temperatures (SST) derived by artificial neural network technique (ANN), based on planktonic foraminiferal species abundance data. Low winter SST anomalies in the northeastern Arabian Sea, a proxy for NEM strength, coincide with cold stadials (YD, H1, H2, H3) in the Greenland record and weakened SWM, implying that the cold conditions in Greenland strengthen the NEM and weaken the SWM on the Asian Subcontinent. Asynchrony between the NEM and SWM variability between ~37 and 9 kyr BP was driven by the southward shift of the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) during colder phases of the Greenland stadials strengthening the NEM and weakening the SWM. This study implies that the migration of the ITCZ in the tropical Indian Ocean is controlled by the meridional atmospheric temperature gradient resulting from Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) changes. • Close link between NEM and winter cooling in the Arabian Sea was documented. • Strong coupling between AMOC and ITCZ migration • Distinct asynchrony between strengths of NEM & SWM during YD, H1, H2, H3 • NEM variability shows a clear contrast between MIS 2 and MIS 1.

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