Little Ice Age - Global Event
Received 8
February
2012;
accepted 30
March
2012;
published 9
May
2012.
Citation:
(2012),
Little Ice Age cold interval in West Antarctica: Evidence from borehole temperature at the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS)
Divide,
Geophys. Res. Lett.,
39,
L09710,
doi:10.1029/2012GL051260.
he largest climate anomaly of the last 1000 years in the Northern
Hemisphere was the Little Ice Age (LIA) from 1400–1850 C.E.,
but little is known about the signature of this
event in the Southern Hemisphere, especially in Antarctica. We present
temperature
data from a 300 m borehole at the West Antarctic
Ice Sheet (WAIS) Divide. Results show that WAIS Divide was colder than
the
last 1000-year average from 1300 to 1800 C.E.
The temperature in the time period 1400–1800 C.E. was on average 0.52 ±
0.28°C
colder than the last 100-year average. This
amplitude is about half of that seen at Greenland Summit (GRIP). This
result is
consistent with the idea that the LIA was a
global event, probably caused by a change in solar and volcanic forcing,
and was
not simply a seesaw-type redistribution of heat
between the hemispheres as would be predicted by some ocean-circulation
hypotheses.
The difference in the magnitude of the LIA
between Greenland and West Antarctica suggests that the feedbacks
amplifying the
radiative forcing may not operate in the same
way in both regions.

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