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1 Laboratory of Marine Geology, Tongji University, Shanghai 200092, China
The beginning of the mid-Brunhes event ca. 430 ka coincided with the largest-amplitude change in
18O in the global ocean over the past 6 m.y. This large
18O change recorded a major ice-sheet expansion that cannot be explained by small changes in orbital forcing. Our recent studies at Ocean Drilling Program Site 1143 from the South China Sea show that this large
18O change was preceded by a significant negative
13C shift. A global survey of long deep-sea records has revealed periodic
13Cmax episodes (i.e., maximum positive values of
13C), and both major ice-sheet expansion events in the Pleistocene (the mid-Brunhes event and the middle Pleistocene revolution) were preceded by
13Cmax episodes followed by negative
13C shifts. This new finding suggests that disturbance in carbon reservoirs leads to major growth of ice-sheet size and challenges the prevalent concept of Arctic control of glacial cycles. Because Earth is now passing again through a
13Cmax episode, it is crucial to understand the causal relationship between the successive
13C changes and ice-sheet growth events.
Key Words: carbon isotopes ice sheet mid-Brunhes event South China Sea
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