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Science Advances:Dole effect as a measurement of the low-latitude hydrological cycle over the past 800 ka

Enqing Huang1,*, Pinxian Wang1, Yue Wang1, Mi Yan2, Jun Tian1, Shihan Li1 and Wentao Ma1,3

1 State Key Laboratory of Marine Geology, Tongji University, Shanghai 200092, China.

2 Key Laboratory for Virtual Geographic Environment, School of Geography, Nanjing Normal University, Nanjing 210023, China.

3 State Key Laboratory of Satellite Ocean Environment Dynamics, Second Institute of Oceanography, Hangzhou 310012, China.

* Corresponding author. Email: ehuang@tongji.edu.cn

 

Abstract

The quest of geological proxies to evaluate low-latitude hydrological changes at a planetary scale remains an ongoing issue. The Dole effect is such a potential proxy owing to its global character. We propose a new approach to recalculate the fluctuation of the Dole effect (∆DE*) over the past 800 thousand years (ka). The ∆DE* calculated this way is dominated by precession cycles alone, with lesser variance in the obliquity bands and almost no variance in the eccentricity bands. Moreover, the ∆DE* is notably correlated with Chinese stalagmite δ18O record over the past 640 ka; simulated terrestrial rainfall changes between 30°N and 30°S over the past 300 ka. Our findings highlight the predominant role of the low-latitude hydroclimate in governing the ∆DE* on orbital time scales, while high-latitude climate impacts are negligible. In turn, we argue that the ∆DE* can be used to indicate low-latitude hydrological changes at a global extent.

 

Full Article:https://advances.sciencemag.org/content/6/41/eaba4823.full