GC21F-01
High-amplitude, centennial-scale climate oscillations during the last glacial in the western Third Pole as recorded in the Guliya ice cap

Tuesday, 15 December 2015: 08:00
3003 (Moscone West)
Lonnie G Thompson1,2, Tandong Yao3, Ellen Mosley-Thompson2, Guangjian Wu3, Mary Elizabeth Davis2, Lide Tian3 and Ping-Nan Lin2, (1)Ohio State University Main Campus, Columbus, OH, United States, (2)The Ohio State University, Byrd Polar and Climate Research Center, Columbus, OH, United States, (3)ITP Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China
Abstract:
The Guliya ice cap, located in the Kunlun Mountains in the western Third Pole (TP) region near the northern limit of the southwest monsoon influence, may be the only non-polar ice field that provides detailed histories of climate and environment over the last glacial cycle. A continuous climate record from an ice core drilled in 1992 contains Eemian ice, and basal temperatures measured that year confirmed that the record was not being removed from the bottom. The δ18O record throughout Marine Isotope Stage 2 (MIS2) displays the occurrence of high-amplitude (~20‰) episodes of ~200-year periodicity, and the aerosol records suggest snow cover, regional vegetation and fire frequency that vary in synchrony. These oscillations might reflect the movement of the northernmost penetration of the monsoon precipitation through the Late Glacial Stage, which is restricted by the topographic barrier posed by the Kunlun range, and might also reflect solar-driven nonlinearities in the climate system such as sudden shifts in the jet stream. Recent model simulations suggest that glacial cooling over China was significantly amplified by stationary waves, and the Guliya MIS2 oscillations could reflect cyclical variability in these waves. These results are supported by clumped isotope thermometry of carbonates from the Chinese Loess Plateau, which indicate a 6 to 7oC decrease in Last Glacial Maximum summer temperatures. These studies will lead to a better understanding of the mechanisms driving such high-frequency, high-amplitude oscillations.

A review of the 2015 Sino-American cooperative ice core drilling program on Guliya is presented. This program will serve as a flagship for the TP Environment Program, an international, multidisciplinary collaboration among professionals and students in 14 countries designed to investigate environmental changes across the TP. The rapidly warming TP contains ~46,000 glaciers that collectively hold one of Earth’s largest stores of fresh water that feeds Asia’s largest rivers and helps sustain 1.5 billion people. Information on the accelerating warming of these glaciers and the impact on future water resources in this important region is urgently needed to help guide mitigation and adaptation policies.