Publications by authors named "Sune Olander Rasmussen"

Article Synopsis
  • The study examines abrupt climate changes during the Pleistocene Ice Ages, known as Dansgaard-Oeschger (DO) oscillations, using Greenland ice cores to analyze temperature shifts and their potential long-term impacts.
  • It introduces new ice-core records from southern and eastern Greenland to enhance understanding of DO event magnitudes and creates a multiproxy assessment of their effects across Greenland.
  • The findings suggest that variations in wintertime sea ice in the North Atlantic subpolar gyre are crucial for explaining DO variability, and that changes in vapor source distribution, rather than site temperature, mainly influence Greenland's isotope signals during these climate transitions.
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The Millennium Eruption of Mt. Baekdu, one of the largest volcanic eruptions in the Common Era, initiated in late 946. It remains uncertain whether its two main compositional phases, rhyolite and trachyte, were expelled in a single eruption or in two.

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Abrupt climate changes during the last glacial period have been detected in a global array of palaeoclimate records, but our understanding of their absolute timing and regional synchrony is incomplete. Our compilation of 63 published, independently dated speleothem records shows that abrupt warmings in Greenland were associated with synchronous climate changes across the Asian Monsoon, South American Monsoon, and European-Mediterranean regions that occurred within decades. Together with the demonstration of bipolar synchrony in atmospheric response, this provides independent evidence of synchronous high-latitude-to-tropical coupling of climate changes during these abrupt warmings.

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Contrasting Greenland and Antarctic temperatures during the last glacial period (115,000 to 11,650 years ago) are thought to have been driven by imbalances in the rates of formation of North Atlantic and Antarctic Deep Water (the 'bipolar seesaw'). Here we exploit a bidecadally resolved C data set obtained from New Zealand kauri (Agathis australis) to undertake high-precision alignment of key climate data sets spanning iceberg-rafted debris event Heinrich 3 and Greenland Interstadial (GI) 5.1 in the North Atlantic (~30,400 to 28,400 years ago).

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