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      Bunker Cave stalagmites: an archive for central European Holocene climate variability

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          Abstract

          <p><strong>Abstract.</strong> Holocene climate was characterised by variability on multi-centennial to multi-decadal time scales. In central Europe, these fluctuations were most pronounced during winter. Here we present a record of past winter climate variability for the last 10.8 ka based on four speleothems from Bunker Cave, western Germany. Due to its central European location, the cave site is particularly well suited to record changes in precipitation and temperature in response to changes in the North Atlantic realm. We present high-resolution records of &amp;delta;<sup>18</sup>O, &amp;delta;<sup>13</sup>C values and Mg/Ca ratios. Changes in the Mg/Ca ratio are attributed to past meteoric precipitation variability. The stable C isotope composition of the speleothems most likely reflects changes in vegetation and precipitation, and variations in the &amp;delta;<sup>18</sup>O signal are interpreted as variations in meteoric precipitation and temperature. We found cold and dry periods between 8 and 7 ka, 6.5 and 5.5 ka, 4 and 3 ka as well as between 0.7 and 0.2 ka. The proxy signals in the Bunker Cave stalagmites compare well with other isotope records and, thus, seem representative for central European Holocene climate variability. The prominent 8.2 ka event and the Little Ice Age cold events are both recorded in the Bunker Cave record. However, these events show a contrasting relationship between climate and &amp;delta;<sup>18</sup>O, which is explained by different causes underlying the two climate anomalies. Whereas the Little Ice Age is attributed to a pronounced negative phase of the North Atlantic Oscillation, the 8.2 ka event was triggered by cooler conditions in the North Atlantic due to a slowdown of the thermohaline circulation.</p>

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          Mid- to Late Holocene climate change: an overview

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            Persistent positive North Atlantic oscillation mode dominated the Medieval Climate Anomaly.

            The Medieval Climate Anomaly (MCA) was the most recent pre-industrial era warm interval of European climate, yet its driving mechanisms remain uncertain. We present here a 947-year-long multidecadal North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) reconstruction and find a persistent positive NAO during the MCA. Supplementary reconstructions based on climate model results and proxy data indicate a clear shift to weaker NAO conditions into the Little Ice Age (LIA). Globally distributed proxy data suggest that this NAO shift is one aspect of a global MCA-LIA climate transition that probably was coupled to prevailing La Niña-like conditions amplified by an intensified Atlantic meridional overturning circulation during the MCA.
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              The temperature of Europe during the Holocene reconstructed from pollen data

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Climate of the Past
                Clim. Past
                Copernicus GmbH
                1814-9332
                2012
                October 31 2012
                : 8
                : 5
                : 1751-1764
                Article
                10.5194/cp-8-1751-2012
                efd77bcc-c1ab-4588-90cb-6b1703334ada
                © 2012

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

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