4.7 Article

Holocene El Nino-Southern Oscillation variability reflected in subtropical Australian precipitation

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SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
卷 9, 期 -, 页码 -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-38626-3

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资金

  1. Australian Research Council [LP0990124, DP150103875]
  2. Australian Institute of Nuclear Science Engineering [ALNGRA11005P, ALNGRA15524]
  3. U.S. National Science Foundation EaSM2 Grant [AGS1243125]
  4. Australian Research Council's Special Research Initiative for the Antarctic Gateway Partnership [SR140300001]
  5. Australian Research Council [LP0990124] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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The La Nina and El Nino phases of the El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) have major impacts on regional rainfall patterns around the globe, with substantial environmental, societal and economic implications. Long-term perspectives on ENSO behaviour, under changing background conditions, are essential to anticipating how ENSO phases may respond under future climate scenarios. Here, we derive a 7700-year, quantitative precipitation record using carbon isotope ratios from a single species of leaf preserved in lake sediments from subtropical eastern Australia. We find a generally wet (more La Ninalike) mid-Holocene that shifted towards drier and more variable climates after 3200 cal. yr BP, primarily driven by increasing frequency and strength of the El Nino phase. Climate model simulations implicate a progressive orbitally-driven weakening of the Pacific Walker Circulation as contributing to this change. At centennial scales, high rainfall characterised the Little Ice Age (similar to 1450-1850 CE) in subtropical eastern Australia, contrasting with oceanic proxies that suggest El Nino-like conditions prevail during this period. Our data provide a new western Pacific perspective on Holocene ENSO variability and highlight the need to address ENSO reconstruction with a geographically diverse network of sites to characterise how both ENSO, and its impacts, vary in a changing climate.

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