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Jökull - 01.01.2015, Page 84

Jökull - 01.01.2015, Page 84
Jónsdóttir et al. and not strong enough to explain the rather abrupt fluctuations that began in the 13th century CE and the multi-century climate variations of the past 2000 years. Decadal scale fluctuations have been linked with solar activity and volcanic eruptions, or induced by internal variability. The longer-term fluctuations were additionally driven by changes in ocean circu- lation (Broecker, 2000; Denton and Broecker, 2008). Changes in climate variability over the North At- lantic region have been explained for example with fluctuations of Atlantic Water in the northern North Atlantic (Hald et al., 2011), shutdown of deep wa- ter convection, sustained by sea ice formation, in the Nordic Seas in response to negative solar insolation anomalies (Berner et al., 2011), repeated explosive volcanism with centuries of lower-than-modern solar irradiance (Miller et al., 2012), changes in solar ac- tivity (Jiang et al., 2015) and shifts in the NAO from positive mode to negative (Mann et al., 2009; Trouet et al., 2009). Miller et al. (2012) also suggested that repeated explosive volcanism alongside low summer insolation across the Northern Hemisphere acted as a climate trigger resulting in increasing sea ice expan- sion and a sea-ice/ocean feedback then maintained suppressed summer air temperature, long after the volcanic aerosols were removed from the atmosphere. Changes in the foraminifera fauna in Arnarfjörður indicate a clear sign of changes in the oceanic cur- rents around Iceland, with intervals more influenced from the warmer Irminger Current to times with more influence from colder currents. Changes in the NAO also seem to play a role in the environment in Arn- arfjörður, with warmer and wetter conditions during the MWP compared to the LIA. A comparison of the BWT record from Arnarfjörður and other proxy records from Iceland with both reconstructed solar irradiation (Steinhilber et al., 2009) and indices of volcanic activities (Sigl et al., 2015) is shown in Fig- ure 7. Cold intervals in the Arnarfjörður record fall within both low solar irradiance and increased vol- canic activity between 1200 and 1300 CE, and again between 1450 and 1550 CE, when both sea ice north of Iceland increased as well as when a drop in tem- perature from the lake records occurred. The coldest time period in Arnarfjörður took place between 1650 and 1750 CE, during the time of the Maunder min- ima (1645–1715 CE) when the volcanic indices also indicate several large volcanic eruptions (Figure 7). It may thus be difficult to disentangle the different forcing mechanism during this interval but the Arnar- fjörður record is showing very similar environmental and temperature changes as has been recorded in and around Iceland during the last 2000 years. CONCLUSIONS The proxy records from Arnarfjörður show several environmental changes occurring over the time pe- riod ca. 350–1850 years CE. Cibicides lobatulus is the most dominant species at the bottom part of the core but the Arctic species C. reniforme and E. excavatum increase upwards. The core was divided into three time periods based on Cluster Analyses on the foraminiferal assemblages. The oldest part of the core (350 to 800 CE) shows a cooling but fairly sta- ble condition (DACP). Between 800 and 1200 CE (MWP) the bottom water temperature increases and many of the Arctic species diminish. The MWP was wetter and warmer, under the influence of positive NAO and coarser grained material was carried out to the fjord, possibly due to higher precipitation, higher discharge from land to sea and stronger currents in the fjord eroding the coastline of Arnarfjörður. Around 1100 CE the bottom water temperature is ca. 4.5◦C, which is similar to the mean annual BWT in Arn- arfjörður today. The MWP-LIA transition occurred around 1200 CE with a significant change in the fau- nal assemblage when Arctic species increases, indi- cating colder conditions in the fjord. The proxies in the core from Arnarfjörður suggest that the LIA was very unstable and shifted from colder to less colder times. From ca. 1200 to 1400 CE the climate was cooling, but after 1400 CE the conditions started to get harsher and there was a clear change in the fau- nal assemblage with C. reniforme and E. excavatum becoming the dominant species. The coldest time pe- riod in Arnarfjörður was between 1650 and 1750 CE (note: the core is missing the upper most 150 yr) when there was a clear drop in BWT, TC and carbonate and increase in density, MS and coarse grained material. The climate and environmental variability in Arnar- 84 JÖKULL No. 65, 2015
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