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Millennial-scale climate changes manifest Milankovitch combination tones and Hallstatt solar cycles in the Devonian greenhouse world

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    0503957 - GLÚ 2020 RIV US eng J - Journal Article
    da Silva, A.C. - Dekkers, M. J. - De Vleeschouwer, D. - Hladil, Jindřich - Chadimová, Leona - Slavík, Ladislav - Hilgen, F. J.
    Millennial-scale climate changes manifest Milankovitch combination tones and Hallstatt solar cycles in the Devonian greenhouse world.
    Geology. Roč. 47, č. 1 (2019), s. 19-22. ISSN 0091-7613. E-ISSN 1943-2682
    Institutional support: RVO:67985831
    Keywords : origin * record * variability * cyclicity * band
    OECD category: Geology
    Impact factor: 4.768, year: 2019
    Method of publishing: Limited access
    https://pubs.geoscienceworld.org/gsa/geology/article/47/1/19/567354/Millennialscale-climate-changes-manifest

    Sub-Milankovitch rhythmic features in sedimentary records have been reported from throughout geological time. However, their origin remains enigmatic, in particular during so-called greenhouse periods in Earth's history. To better understand such short-term climatic changes, we sampled two 3-m-thick intervals of early Devonian hemipelagic carbonate at 1 cm resolution in the Pod Barrandovem section (Czech Republic). Greenhouse conditions prevailed during early Devonian times, and the chosen resolution enables the detection of millennial-scale climate change as recorded by elemental abundances. We used a previously published astrochronology for the section to transform the studied series from the stratigraphic into the time domain. Spectral analysis of the time-calibrated log-transformed Ti records reveal obliquity and precession cycles, confirming the applied astrochronology. Additional spectral peaks with periods of 2.3-2.7, 6-8, and 10-12 k.y. appear in both records. Furthermore, a 1.5 k.y. periodicity, close to the Pleistocene Dansgaard-Oeschger oscillation, is also identified, but only in the record with higher accumulation rate (similar to 3.5 cm/k.y.). Bi-coherence spectra reveal that the 6-8 and 10-12 k.y. periodic components are combination tones of Milankovitch cycles. We infer the shorter similar to 2.5 k.y. periodicity to be the result of solar forcing, related to the Hallstatt cycle. These new observations strengthen the case for an external origin of millennial-scale features.
    Permanent Link: http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0295711

     
     
Number of the records: 1  

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