Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Preface
- SECTION A Global and Regional Characteristics and Impacts of ENSO Variability
- SECTION B Long-Term Changes in ENSO: Historical, Paleoclimatic, and Theoretical Aspects
- 7 The Documented Historical Record of El Niño Events in Peru: An Update of the Quinn Record (Sixteenth through Nineteenth Centuries)
- 8 Tree-Ring Records of Past ENSO Variability and Forcing
- 9 The Tropical Ice Core Record of ENSO
- 10 Long-Term Variability in the El Niño/Southern Oscillation and Associated Teleconnections
- 11 Modulation of ENSO Variability on Decadal and Longer Timescales
- 12 Global Climate Change and El Niño: A Theoretical Framework
- 13 The Past ENSO Record: A Synthesis
- Index
9 - The Tropical Ice Core Record of ENSO
from SECTION B - Long-Term Changes in ENSO: Historical, Paleoclimatic, and Theoretical Aspects
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Preface
- SECTION A Global and Regional Characteristics and Impacts of ENSO Variability
- SECTION B Long-Term Changes in ENSO: Historical, Paleoclimatic, and Theoretical Aspects
- 7 The Documented Historical Record of El Niño Events in Peru: An Update of the Quinn Record (Sixteenth through Nineteenth Centuries)
- 8 Tree-Ring Records of Past ENSO Variability and Forcing
- 9 The Tropical Ice Core Record of ENSO
- 10 Long-Term Variability in the El Niño/Southern Oscillation and Associated Teleconnections
- 11 Modulation of ENSO Variability on Decadal and Longer Timescales
- 12 Global Climate Change and El Niño: A Theoretical Framework
- 13 The Past ENSO Record: A Synthesis
- Index
Summary
Abstract
Ice core records from tropical and subtropical ice caps provide unique information about the chemical and physical character of the atmosphere. Seasonal variations in the chemical composition of the snowfall and amount of precipitation accumulating on these ice caps produce annual laminations that allow these stratigraphic sequences to be dated. The thickness of an annual lamination reflects the net accumulation, while the physical and chemical constituents (e.g., dust, δ18O, various ions) record atmospheric conditions during deposition. The information presented in this chapter builds upon an earlier investigation of the preservation of an El Niño/Southern Oscillation (ENSO) history in the 1,500-year record from ice cores recovered from the Quelccaya ice cap, Peru (Thompson et al. 1992).
Recent ice cores from Nevado Huascarán, Peru (90°7′S, 77°37′W, 6,048 m), which provided the first tropical ice core history extending back to the Late Glacial Stage (Thompson et al. 1995), also contain an annually resolvable record for the past 270 years. This study is based upon the most recent 68-year period from the Huascaran ice cores, from which a methodology for isolation of ENSO events is developed.
The Quelccaya ENSO study (Thompson et al. 1992) revealed that in the Peruvian Andes the ice core constituent most highly correlated with sea surface temperatures (SSTs) is δ18O(r = 0.36, significant at the 95% level).
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- El Niño and the Southern OscillationMultiscale Variability and Global and Regional Impacts, pp. 325 - 356Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000
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