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- Creator:
- Fudge, T. J., Markle, Bradley R., Cuffey, Kurt M., Buizert, Christo, Taylor, Kendrick C., Steig, Eric J., Waddington, Edwin D., Conway, Howard, and Koutnik, Michelle
- Abstract:
- The Antarctic contribution to sea level is a balance between ice loss along the margin and accumulation in the interior. Accumulation records for the past few decades are noisy and show inconsistent relationships with temperature. We investigate the relationship between accumulation and temperature for the past 31 ka using high-resolution records...
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- Creator:
- Fudge, T. J., Markle, Bradley R., Cuffey, Kurt M., Buizert, Christo, Taylor, Kendrick C., Steig, Eric J., Waddington, Edwin D., Conway, Howard, and Koutnik, Michelle
- Abstract:
- The Antarctic contribution to sea level is a balance between ice loss along the margin and accumulation in the interior. Accumulation records for the past few decades are noisy and show inconsistent relationships with temperature. We investigate the relationship between accumulation and temperature for the past 31 ka using high-resolution records...
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- Creator:
- Fudge, T. J., Markle, Bradley R., Cuffey, Kurt M., Buizert, Christo, Taylor, Kendrick C., Steig, Eric J., Waddington, Edwin D., Conway, Howard, and Koutnik, Michelle
- Abstract:
- The Antarctic contribution to sea level is a balance between ice loss along the margin and accumulation in the interior. Accumulation records for the past few decades are noisy and show inconsistent relationships with temperature. We investigate the relationship between accumulation and temperature for the past 31 ka using high-resolution records...
- Resource Type:
- Article
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- Creator:
- Buizert, Christo, Adrian, Betty, Ahn, Jinho, Albert, Mary, Alley, Richard B., Baggenstos, Daniel, Bauska, Thomas K., Bay, Ryan C., Bencivengo, Brian B., Bentley, Charles R., Brook, Edward J., Chellman, Nathan J., Clow, Gary D., Cole-Dai, Jihong, Conway, Howard, Cravens, Eric, Cuffey, Kurt M., Dunbar, Nelia W., Edwards, Jon S., Fegyveresi, John M., Ferris, Dave G., Fitzpatrick, Joan J., Fudge, T. J., Gibson, Chris J., Gkinis, Vasileios, Goetz, Joshua J., Gregory, Stephanie, Hargreaves, Geoffrey M., Iverson, Nels, Johnson, Jay A., Jones, Tyler R., Kalk, Michael L., Kippenhan, Matthew J., Koffman, Bess G., Kreutz, Karl, Kuhl, Tanner W., Lebar, Donald A., Lee, James E., Marcott, Shaun A., Markle, Bradley R., Maselli, Olivia J., McConnell, Joseph R., McGwire, Kenneth C., Mitchell, Logan E., Mortensen, Nicolai B., Neff, Peter D., Nishiizumi, Kunihiko, Nunn, Richard M., Orsi, Anais J., Pasteris, Daniel R., Pedro, Joel B., Pettit, Erin C., Price, P. Buford, Priscu, John C., Rhodes, Rachael H., Rosen, Julia L., Schauer, Andrew J., Schoenemann, Spruce W., Sendelbach, Paul J., Severinghaus, Jeffrey P., Shturmakov, Alexander J., Sigl, Michael, Slawny, Kristina R., Souney, Joseph M., Sowers, Todd A., Spencer, Matthew K., Steig, Eric J., Taylor, Kendrick C., Twickler, Mark S., Vaughn, Bruce H., Voigt, Donald E., Waddington, Edwin D., Welten, Kees C., Wendricks, Anthony W., White, James W. C., Winstrup, Mai, Wong, Gifford J., and Woodruff, Thomas E.
- Abstract:
- The last glacial period exhibited abrupt Dansgaard–Oeschger climatic oscillations, evidence of which is preserved in a variety of Northern Hemisphere palaeoclimate archives¹. Ice cores show that Antarctica cooled during the warm phases of the Greenland Dansgaard–Oeschger cycle and vice versa[superscript 2,3], suggesting an interhemispheric redistribution of heat through a mechanism...
- Resource Type:
- Article
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- Creator:
- Fudge, T. J., Steig, Eric J., Markle, Bradley R., Schoenemann, Spruce W., Ding, Qinghua, Taylor, Kendrick C., McConnell, Joseph R., Brook, Edward J., Sowers, Todd, White, James W. C., Alley, Richard B., Cheng, Hai, Clow, Gary D., Cole-Dai, Jihong, Conway, Howard, Cuffey, Kurt M., Edwards, Jon S., Edwards, R. Lawrence, Edwards, Ross, Fegyveresi, John M., Ferris, David, Fitzpatrick, Joan J., Johnson, Jay, Hargreaves, Geoffrey, Lee, James E., Maselli, Olivia J., Mason, William, McGwire, Kenneth C., Mitchell, Logan E., Mortensen, Nicolai, Neff, Peter, Orsi, Anais J., Popp, Trevor J., and Schauer, Andrew J.
- Abstract:
- The cause of warming in the Southern Hemisphere during the most recent deglaciation remains a matter of debate[superscript 1,2]. Hypotheses for a Northern Hemisphere trigger, through oceanic redistributions of heat, are based in part on the abrupt onset of warming seen in East Antarctic ice cores and dated to 18,000...
- Resource Type:
- Article