K. Mc Intyre et al., Millennial-scale climate change and oceanic processes in the late Plioceneand early Pleistocene, PALEOCEANOG, 16(5), 2001, pp. 535-543
We generated 200-500 year resolution records of oceanic processes in the No
rth Atlantic (Ocean Drilling Program Site 983, 60 degrees 24'N, 23 degrees
38'W, 1983 meters water depth) for intervals in the latest Pliocene (1.86-1
.93 Ma) and the earliest Pleistocene (1.75-1.83 Ma) in order to examine the
linkages between millennial-scale variations in the ocean and background g
lacial-interglacial climate change. Within glacial intervals we fmd evidenc
e for variations similar to those observed in the late Pleistocene. We find
discrete ice-rafted debris (IRD) events that reoccur every 2-5 kyr. These
events are preceded by a short cooling and accompanied by a reorganization
of glacial deep waters. The timing of IRD events in the late Pliocene and e
arly Pleistocene intervals is similar to that of Dansgaard-Oeschger cycles,
but we find no HD events comparable in timing to late Pleistocene Heinrich
events. Although interglacial intervals are much more stable, we do find e
vidence for low-amplitude variations in deep water properties that reoccur
every similar to2 kyr within interglacial intervals. The similarity between
our late Pliocene-early Pleistocene records and late Pleistocene records i
mplies that the mechanism driving millennial-scale variations cannot be uni
quely attributed to the strongly nonlinear linkage between climate and inso
lation and the large ice sheets of the late Pleisfocene.