Abstract

Abstract Leads, lags, or synchronies in climatic events among different regions are key to understanding mechanisms of climate change, as they provide insights into the causal linkages among components of the climate system. The well-studied transition from the Lateglacial to early Holocene (ca. 16–10 ka) contains several abrupt climatic shifts, making this period ideal for assessing the spatio-temporal structure of climate change. However, comparisons of timings of past climatic events among regions often remain hypothetical because site-specific age scales are not necessarily synchronised to each other. Here we present new pollen data (n = 510) and mean annual temperature reconstruction from the annually laminated sediments of Lake Suigetsu, Japan. Suigetsu's 14C dataset is an integral component of the IntCal20 radiocarbon calibration model, in which the absolute age scale is established to the highest standard. Its exceptionally high-precision chronology, along with recent advances in cosmogenic isotope studies of ice cores, enables temporally coherent comparisons among Suigetsu, Greenland, and other key proxy records across regions. We show that the onsets of the Lateglacial cold reversal (equivalent to GS-1/Younger Dryas) and the Holocene were synchronous between East Asia and the North Atlantic, whereas the Lateglacial interstadial (equivalent to GI-1/Bolling-Allerod) started ca. two centuries earlier in East Asia than in the North Atlantic. Bimodal migration (or ‘jump’) of the westerly jet between north and south of the Tibetan plateau and Himalayas may have operated as a threshold system responsible for the abruptness of the change in East and South (and possibly also West) Asia. That threshold in Asia and another major threshold in the North Atlantic, associated with switching on/off of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC), were crossed at different times, producing a multi-centennial asynchrony of abrupt changes, as well as a disparity of climatic modes among regions during the transitional phases. Such disparity may have disturbed zonal circulation and generated unstable climate during transitions. The intervening periods with stable climate, on the other hand, coincided with the beginnings of sedentary life and agriculture, implying that these new lifestyles and technologies were not rational unless climate was stable and thus, to a certain extent, predictable.

Highlights

  • We show that the onsets of the Lateglacial cold reversal and the Holocene were synchronous between East Asia and the North Atlantic, whereas the Lateglacial interstadial

  • We present a microscopic yet robust reconstruction of the spatio-temporal structure of the abrupt climate transitions during the Lateglacial, centring upon new data from Suigetsu and the other best age-controlled archives available to us today, including NGRIP and Hulu

  • Suigetsu’s original age scale (SG062012 yr BP chronology) was con­ structed by wiggle-matching Suigetsu’s 14C dataset onto Hulu’s and Bahamas’ speleothem data, with constraints by layer counts and taking into ac­ count the possible variation ranges of the dead carbon fraction’ (DCF) (Bronk Ramsey et al, 2012; Staff et al, 2013a)

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Summary

Definitions

This paper refers to the ages defined by different methods, and synchroneities among them cannot be assumed (Brauer et al, 2014). IntCal yr BP: The absolute age scale assigned to the IntCal radiocarbon calibration model (Reimer et al, 2020). GICC05 yr b1.95k: The absolute age scale assigned to the Greenland ice cores (Andersen et al, 2006; Rasmussen et al, 2006; Svensson et al, 2006; Vinther et al, 2006). We do not use ‘b2k’ or any other units that have 2000 CE as the datum, anywhere in this paper.

Difficulties of reliable correlation among regions
Problems with the previous pollen data from Lake Suigetsu
Context of this study and palaeoclimatological significance
Sub-sampling varved sediments
Pollen analysis and climate reconstruction
Updating the age model
Comparison with other sites
Overall trend
Timings of the climatic changes in detail
Comparison with speleothem data
Implications for human history
Observations
Interpretations
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