Joint 60th Annual Northeastern/59th Annual North-Central Section Meeting - 2025

Paper No. 26-9
Presentation Time: 8:30 AM-5:30 PM

GREENLAND (INTER)STADIAL EVENTS IN A STALAGMITE OXYGEN AND CARBON ISOTOPE RECORD FROM NEPAL


JOHNSON, Rhianna1, DENNISTON, Rhawn1, UMMENHOFER, Caroline C.2, THATCHER, Diana3, WANAMAKER Jr., Alan D.4, ASMEROM, Yemane5, POLYAK, Victor5, GURUNG, Ashok6 and MAGAR, Surya Thapa7, (1)Department of Earth and Environment, Cornell College, Mount Vernon, IA 52314, (2)Department of Physical Oceanography, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, MA 02543, (3)Geological & Atmospheric Sciences, Iowa State University, 253 Science I, Ames, IA 50011, (4)Department of Geological and Atmospheric Sciences, Iowa State University, 253 Science I, Ames, IA 50011; National Science Foundation, Alexandria, VA 22314, (5)Earth & Planetary Sciences, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131, (6)Community Support Group, Pokhara, Gandaki 33700, Nepal, (7)Tanahun District Government, Bandipur, Gandaki 33904, Nepal

Greenland stadials and interstadials (GS/GI) were millennial climate oscillations during the last glacial period that were originally identified in Greenland ice cores but that have been correlated with environmental change around much of the globe, including in monsoon regimes, with enhanced monsoon rainfall coincident with North Atlantic warming. Hydroclimate variability associated with GS/GI have been investigated in detail using terrestrial (primarily oxygen isotopes in stalagmites) and marine records, particularly for the Southeast Asian monsoon. However, a considerably smaller number of terrestrial records preserve these events in the Indian summer monsoon (ISM), the primary water source for ~2 billion people across South Asia.

Here we present the first glacial-age speleothem stable isotope time series from Nepal, located in the ISM regime. UK-1 is a 187 mm tall aragonite stalagmite from the Pokhara Valley of central Nepal, ~150 km west of Kathmandu. The chronology of UK-1 was established by 8 U/Th dates, all of which fall in stratigraphic order (within the errors) and have age uncertainties averaging ±84 yr. Growth was continuous from 34,350-31,500 yr BP (Marine Isotope Stage 3). Stable isotope samples were measured every 1 mm, corresponding to a temporal resolution of 18 yr. Oxygen isotope ratios range from -5.6‰ to -7.6‰, and share the same timing and structure as Greenland (inter)stadials GS/GI 6 and 5.2 in the NGRIP record. We interpret this as reflecting an amount effect response to a strengthened ISM driven by more (less) poleward migration of the intertropical convergence zone during periods of northern hemisphere warming (cooling). This clear millennial signal in UK-1 is a somewhat unexpected result given that amount effects in oxygen isotopes in precipitation are weak (R2=0.1) in this region today.

UK-1 carbon isotope ratios range from -3‰ to -6‰ (excluding a small number of negative spikes) and exhibit variability coarsely similar to the NGRIP record, with lower (higher) values generally corresponding to GI (GS), possibly due to prior calcite precipitation in voids above the cave concomitant with changes in precipitation. Some periods of antiphasing between carbon and oxygen are also apparent and may reflect flushing of soil carbon dioxide during particularly wet phases.