List of contributors, xi
Preface, xiii
Acknowledgements, xiv
I Global contexts, 1
1 Introduction, 3
Sarah E. Metcalfe and David J. Nash
1.1 Why the tropics matter, 3
1.1.1 Defining the tropics, 3
1.1.2 Importance of the tropics, 4
1.2 Development of ideas, 8
1.2.1 Early ideas about tropical environmental change, 8
1.2.2 The twentieth century revolution, 9
1.2.3 Advances in modelling, 12
1.3 Establishment of the tropical climate system, 13
1.4 Drivers of tropical environmental change, 17
1.5 The tropics as drivers of change, 20
1.5.1 The tropics and greenhouse gas concentrations, 20
1.5.2 Impacts of low latitude volcanic eruptions, 22
1.5.3 Dust emissions from the tropics and subtropics, 23
1.6 Extra-tropical forcing, 24
1.7 Organisation of the volume, 24
Acknowledgements, 25
References, 25
2 Contemporary climate and circulation of the tropics, 34
Stefan Hastenrath
2.1 Introduction, 34
2.2 Diurnal and local processes, 34
2.3 Planetary context, 35
2.4 Regional circulation systems, 36
2.4.1 Jet streams, 36
2.4.2 Subtropical highs and trade winds, 37
2.4.3 Equatorial trough zone, 37
2.4.4 Monsoons, 38
2.4.5 Equatorial zonal circulations, 38
2.5 Climatic variability, 39
2.5.1 Southern Oscillation and El Niño, 39
2.5.2 Indian Monsoon, 40
2.5.3 Northeast Brazil, 41
2.5.4 Sahel, 41
2.5.5 Timescales of variability, 42
2.6 Concluding remarks, 42
References, 42
II Regional environmental change, 45
3 Tropical oceans, 47
Jan-Berend W. Stuut, Matthias Prange, Ute Merkel and Silke Steph
3.1 Tropical oceans in the global climate system, 47
3.1.1 Modern climatology, 47
3.1.2 El NiñoSouthern Oscillation and its relatives, 50
3.1.3 Solar and volcanic radiative forcing of tropical oceans, 51
3.1.4 Tropical oceans and monsoons, 53
3.1.5 The tropical oceans as part of the global conveyor belt, 53
3.2 Reconstructing past ocean conditions, 55
3.2.1 Proxies for SST and SSS, 55
3.2.2 Reconstructing continental climate using marine archives, 57
3.3 Tropical oceans throughout the Quaternary, 57
3.3.1 Glacialinterglacial cycles, 57
3.3.2 Early Quaternary (the 41-kyr world), 57
3.3.3 Mid-Pleistocene Transition, 58
3.3.4 Late Quaternary (the 100-kyr world), 60
3.4 The past 20 000 years, 60
3.4.1 The Last Glacial Maximum, 60
3.4.2 Glacial termination: an active role for the tropics?, 61
3.4.3 History of the equatorial Pacific and the state of ENSO, 65
3.4.4 The Holocene, 66
3.5 Outlook, 68
References, 69
4 Africa, 79
David J. Nash and Michael E. Meadows
4.1 Introduction, 79
4.2 Potential climate forcing factors, 85
4.3 Mediterranean North Africa, 88
4.3.1 Contemporary climate and sources of palaeoenvironmental information, 88
4.3.2 Longer records, 88
4.3.3 The Last Glacial Maximum, 89
4.3.4 The last glacialinterglacial transition, 92
4.3.5 The Holocene, 93
4.4 The Sahara and the Sahel, 94
4.4.1 Contemporary climate and sources of palaeoenvironmental information, 94
4.4.2 Longer records, 95
4.4.3 The Last Glacial Maximum, 96
4.4.4 The last glacialinterglacial transition, 97
4.4.5 The Holocene, 99
4.5 Equatorial Africa, 103
4.5.1 Contemporary climate and sources of palaeoenvironmental information, 103
4.5.2 Longer records, 104
4.5.3 The Last Glacial Maximum, 107
4.5.4 The last glacialinterglacial transition, 109
4.5.5 The Holocene, 110
4.6 Southern Africa, 113
4.6.1 Contemporary climate and sources of palaeoenvironmental information, 113
4.6.2 Longer records, 113
4.6.3 The Last Glacial Maximum, 118
4.6.4 The last glacialinterglacial transition, 121
4.6.5 The Holocene, 122
4.7 Synthesis, 127
4.8 Directions for future research, 129
References, 129
5 India, Arabia and adjacent regions, 151
Ashok K. Singhvi, Nilesh Bhatt, Ken W. Glennie and Pradeep Srivastava
5.1 Introduction, 151
5.2 Quaternary of India and Tibet, 153
5.2.1 Arid and semi-arid regions, 154
5.2.2 Aeolian sands, 154
5.2.3 Aeolian dust (loess deposits), 159
5.2.4 Volcanic ash, 159
5.2.5 Lacustrine records, 161
5.2.6 Peat deposits, 166
5.2.7 Calcretes, 167
5.2.8 Coastal records, 167
5.2.9 Fluvial records, 171
5.2.10 Cave deposits, 176
5.3 Quaternary of the Arabian Sea and Bay of Bengal, 176
5.4 Quaternary of Arabia and the Middle East, 177
5.4.1 Fluvial (wadi) systems, 179
5.4.2 Lacustrine (and sabkha) records, 180
5.4.3 Cave deposits, 182
5.4.4 Aeolian sands, 183
5.4.5 Gypsum in dunes, 187
5.4.6 Late Quaternary Persian (Arabian) Gulf, 188
5.4.7 Dating aeolian sediment supply, 189
5.4.8 Climatic optimum and modern Arabian civilisation, 191
5.4.9 Summary of environmental changes in Arabia and the Middle East, 191
5.5 Conclusions, 192
Acknowledgements, 196
References, 196
6 China and Southeast Asia, 207
Dan Penny
6.1 The South and Southeast Asian region as a component of the Earth system, 207
6.2 Setting the stage for the Quaternary: environmental context and controls, 211
6.3 Regional syntheses, 214
6.3.1 China, 214
6.3.2 Indochina, 221
6.3.3 Sundaland and Wallacea, 225
6.4 The Asian tropics during the Quaternary: driver of planetary change?, 229
References, 230
7 Australia and the southwest Pacific, 236
Peter Kershaw and Sander van der Kaars
7.1 Introduction, 236
7.2 Northeastern Australia, 240
7.2.1 Orbital timescale, 240
7.2.2 Suborbital timescale, 244
7.2.3 Termination 1 and the Holocene, 244
7.3 Northern Australia, 245
7.3.1 Orbital timescale, 245
7.3.2 Termination 1 and the Holocene, 246
7.4 Northwestern Australia, 247
7.4.1 Orbital timescale, 247
7.4.2 Termination 1 and the Holocene, 249
7.5 Western Australia, 249
7.5.1 Orbital timescale, 249
7.5.2 Termination 1 and the Holocene, 251
7.6 Central Australia, 251
7.6.1 Orbital timescale, 251
7.6.2 Termination 1 and the Holocene, 253
7.7 Southwest Pacific Islands, 253
7.8 General discussion and conclusions, 254
7.8.1 Early Quaternary, 254
7.8.2 Late Quaternary cyclicity and abrupt events, 255
7.8.3 Late Quaternary climate alterations, 256
Acknowledgements, 258
References, 258
8 Latin America and the Caribbean, 263
Mark B. Bush and Sarah E. Metcalfe
8.1 Introduction, 263
8.2 Precursor to the Quaternary, 264
8.2.1 Climatic consequences of closure of the Isthmus of Panama, 267
8.2.2 Biotic consequences of closure of the Isthmus of Panama, 267
8.3 Climate mechanisms, 267
8.3.1 Modern climatology, 267
8.3.2 The forcing of Neotropical climates, 270
8.4 Long term climate forcings and cycles, 271
8.4.1 Eccentricity, 271
8.4.2 Precessional cycles and precipitation patterns, 272
8.4.3 Precession as a mixed signal, 273
8.5 Records of climate change, 274
8.5.1 Glacial advance and the LGM, 274
8.5.2 Glacial cooling, 276
8.5.3 Glacial-age precipitation, 278
8.5.4 The status of the refugial hypothesis of tropical diversity, 284
8.5.5 The last deglaciation, 286
8.5.6 The early-mid Holocene, 287
8.5.7 Late Holocene oscillations, 289
8.6 Other climate forcings, 289
8.6.1 Millennial-scale oscillations, 289
8.6.2 Solar cycles, 291
8.6.3 El NiñoSouthern Oscillation, 292
8.7 El Niño records, 292
8.7.1 Archaeology, 292
8.7.2 Historical records, 293
8.7.3 Tree ring records, 293
8.7.4 Corals, 294
8.7.5 Sedimentary records, 295
8.8 Climate and societies, 296
8.8.1 Early agriculture, 296
8.8.2 Cultural collapse, 297
8.9 Conclusions, 298
Acknowledgements, 301
References, 301
III Global syntheses, 313
9 Modelling of tropical environments during the Quaternary, 315
Zhengyu Liu and Pascale Braconnot
9.1 Introduction, 315
9.2 Tropical climate in the Holocene: response to orbital forcing, 316
9.2.1 Orbital forcing, 316
9.2.2 Monsoon response, 317
9.2.3 SST response and oceanic feedback, 319
9.2.4 Precession forcing and obliquity forcing, 324
9.2.5 Ecosystem response and feedback, 330
9.3 Tropical climate at the LGM: the roles of GHGs and ice sheet forcing, 333
9.3.1 Greenhouse gases and ice sheet forcing, 333
9.3.2 Temperature response and climate sensitivity, 333
9.3.3 Monsoon and hydrological response, 338
9.3.4 Ecosystem response and feedbacks, 339
9.4 Tropical climate variability, 339
9.4.1 ENSO and oceanatmosphere interaction, 340
9.4.2 Abrupt change of monsoon climate, 343
9.4.3 Tropical variability and its interaction with high-latitude variability, 344
9.5 Summary and further discussion, 349
9.5.1 Summary, 349
9.5.2 Other issues in Quaternary tropical climate modelling, 350
9.5.3 Climate models of intermediate complexity, 350
9.5.4 Perspective of Earth system modelling of past climate, 351
References, 352
10 Historical environmental change in the tropics, 360
Georgina H. Endfi eld and Robert B. Marks
10.1 Introduction, 360
10.2 Climate change and society in the tropics in the last 1000 years, 361
10.2.1 Climate variability and harvest history in China, 365
10.2.2 Climate and crisis in colonial Mexico, 370
10.3 Exploring anthropogenic impacts in the tropics, 375
10.3.1 Deforesting China, 378
10.3.2 Exploring pre- and post-conquest land use changes in central Mexico, 380
10.4 Recent and future environmental changes in the vulnerable tropics, 382
References, 384
11 Past environmental changes, future environmental challenges, 392
David J. Nash and Sarah E. Metcalfe
11.1 Patterns of tropical environmental change, 392
11.1.1 Last Interglacial, 392
11.1.2 Last Glacial Maximum, 394
11.1.3 The last deglaciation or last glacialinterglacial transition, 396
11.1.4 The Holocene, 398
11.2 Forcings, 401
11.3 Future change in the tropics, 402
11.3.1 Climate responses, 402
11.3.2 Water resources, 404
11.3.3 Biodiversity, 406
11.4 The tropics as drivers of change, 406
11.5 Conclusions, 408
References, 409
Index, 412
Colour plate pages fall between pp. 210 and 211