Artículo de revista
Have the Southern Westerlies changed in a zonally symmetric manner over the last 14,000 years? A hemisphere-wide take on a controversial problem
Fecha
2012Registro en:
Quaternary International 253 (2012) 32-46
doi:10.1016/j.quaint.2011.04.042
Autor
Fletcher, Michael-Shawn
Moreno Moncada, Patricio
Institución
Resumen
The prevailing view in the palaeoclimate literature of the last 20 years is that the Southern Westerly
Winds (SWW) were intensified over southern Australia and Tasmania during the warmer-than-present
early Holocene (11e8 ka). At similar latitudes on the opposite side of the southern mid-latitudes,
palaeoclimate studies have suggested a poleward shift of the northern edge of the westerlies and
focusing at 49 S in southern South America. This zonal asymmetry contrasts with the modern day zonal
symmetry displayed by the SWW and poses a formidable challenge to an understanding of the modes of
climatic variability of the southern extra-tropics. This paper presents an updated synthesis of continuous,
radiocarbon-dated palaeoenvironmental data from the westerlies zone of influence in all Southern
Hemisphere continents. Synchronous multi-millennial trends in moisture, vegetation, fire, and hydrologic
balance are remarkably consistent with the way the SWW changes impact upon the climate in
Southern Hemisphere landmasses in the modern climate. Considering the modern relationships between
local precipitation and zonal wind speeds, it is suggested that the SWW changed in a zonally symmetric
manner at multi-millennial scale between 14 and 5 ka. Regional asymmetry develops after 5 ka across
the Southern Hemisphere, with a pattern of precipitation anomalies akin to the modern functioning of El
Niño e Southern Oscillation, which started ~6200 years ago.