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Abstract
The sensitivity of the Australian Monsoon to changing climate boundary conditions remains controversial due to limited understanding of forcing processes and past variability. Here, we reconstruct austral summer monsoonal discharge and wind-driven winter productivity across the Middle Pleistocene Transition (MPT) in a sediment sequence drilled off NW Australia. We show that monsoonal precipitation and runoff primarily responded to precessional insolation forcing until ~0.95 Ma, but exhibited heightened sensitivity to ice volume and pCO2 related feedbacks following intensification of glacial-interglacial cycles. Our records further suggest that summer monsoon variability at the precessional band was closely tied to the thermal evolution of the Indo-Pacific Warm Pool and strength of the Walker circulation over the past ~1.6 Myr. By contrast, productivity proxy records consistently tracked glacial-interglacial variability, reflecting changing rhythms in polar ice fluctuations and Hadley circulation strength. We conclude that the Australian Monsoon underwent a major re-organization across the MPT and that extratropical feedbacks were instrumental in driving short- and long-term variability.
The response of monsoons to climate change remains uncertain. Here, the authors show that the Australian Summer Monsoon was primarily driven by insolation forcing but exhibited high sensitivity to ice volume and pCO2 after ~0.95 Ma. By contrast, wind-driven winter productivity tracked glacial-interglacial variability over the past 1.6 Myr.
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1 Christian-Albrechts-University, Institute of Geosciences, Kiel, Germany (GRID:grid.9764.c) (ISNI:0000 0001 2153 9986)
2 Australian National University, Research School of Earth Sciences, Acton, Australia (GRID:grid.1001.0) (ISNI:0000 0001 2180 7477)
3 University of California, Ocean Sciences Department, Santa Cruz, USA (GRID:grid.205975.c) (ISNI:0000 0001 0740 6917)
4 Northwest University, Institute of Cenozoic Geology and Environment, State Key Laboratory of Continental Dynamics and Department of Geology, Xi’an, China (GRID:grid.412262.1) (ISNI:0000 0004 1761 5538)
5 The University of Tokyo, Atmosphere and Ocean Research Institute, Chiba, Japan (GRID:grid.26999.3d) (ISNI:0000 0001 2151 536X); The University of Tokyo, Department of Earth and Planetary Science, Graduate School of Science, Tokyo, Japan (GRID:grid.26999.3d) (ISNI:0000 0001 2151 536X)
6 San Jose State University, Department of Geological Oceanography, Moss Landing Marine Laboratories, Moss Landing, USA (GRID:grid.186587.5) (ISNI:0000 0001 0722 3678)
7 Christian-Albrechts-University Kiel, Leibniz Laboratory for Radiometric Dating and Stable Isotope Research, Kiel, Germany (GRID:grid.9764.c) (ISNI:0000 0001 2153 9986)