4.7 Review

Interglacials of the last 800,000years

Journal

REVIEWS OF GEOPHYSICS
Volume 54, Issue 1, Pages 162-219

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2015RG000482

Keywords

interglacials; review; quaternary

Funding

  1. Past Global Changes Project (PAGES)
  2. NSF (USA)
  3. NERC
  4. Royal Society (UK)
  5. F.R.S-FNRS (Belgium)
  6. SNF (Switzerland)
  7. Past Global Changes Project (PAGES)
  8. NSF (USA)
  9. NERC
  10. Royal Society (UK)
  11. F.R.S-FNRS (Belgium)
  12. SNF (Switzerland)
  13. NERC [NE/I025115/1, NE/G007535/1, NE/G00756X/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  14. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [26241011, 15KK0027, 25241005] Funding Source: KAKEN
  15. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/E007600/1, bas0100034, NE/I009639/1, NE/I025115/1, NE/G00756X/1, NE/G007535/1] Funding Source: researchfish
  16. Division Of Earth Sciences
  17. Directorate For Geosciences [1440015] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Interglacials, including the present (Holocene) period, are warm, low land ice extent (high sea level), end-members of glacial cycles. Based on a sea level definition, we identify eleven interglacials in the last 800,000years, a result that is robust to alternative definitions. Data compilations suggest that despite spatial heterogeneity, Marine Isotope Stages (MIS) 5e (last interglacial) and 11c (similar to 400ka ago) were globally strong (warm), while MIS 13a (similar to 500ka ago) was cool at many locations. A step change in strength of interglacials at 450ka is apparent only in atmospheric CO2 and in Antarctic and deep ocean temperature. The onset of an interglacial (glacial termination) seems to require a reducing precession parameter (increasing Northern Hemisphere summer insolation), but this condition alone is insufficient. Terminations involve rapid, nonlinear, reactions of ice volume, CO2, and temperature to external astronomical forcing. The precise timing of events may be modulated by millennial-scale climate change that can lead to a contrasting timing of maximum interglacial intensity in each hemisphere. A variety of temporal trends is observed, such that maxima in the main records are observed either early or late in different interglacials. The end of an interglacial (glacial inception) is a slower process involving a global sequence of changes. Interglacials have been typically 10-30ka long. The combination of minimal reduction in northern summer insolation over the next few orbital cycles, owing to low eccentricity, and high atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations implies that the next glacial inception is many tens of millennia in the future.

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