CLIMATIC VARIABILITY OVER THE LAST TWO MILLENNIA IN THE MEDITERRANEAN AREA_ A REVIEW FROM MARINE PALEOARCHIVES

Fabrizio Lirer 1 , Giulia Margaritelli 2 , Ines Alberico 1 , Sergio Bonomo 3 , Lucilla Capotondi 4 , Antonio Cascella 5 , Federico Di Rita 6 , Luciana Ferraro 1 , Donatella Domenica Insinga 1 , Donatella Magri 6 , Nicola Pelosi 1 , Paola Petrosino 7 & Mattia Vallefuoco 1, 2019, CLIMATIC VARIABILITY OVER THE LAST TWO MILLENNIA IN THE MEDITERRANEAN AREA_ A REVIEW FROM MARINE PALEOARCHIVES, Geografia fisica e dinamica quaternaria (Testo stamp.) 42 (2019): 71–86. doi_10.4461/ GFDQ.2019.42.11,
URL: http://www.cnr.it/prodotto/i/421417

A review of the climatic variability over the last two millennia based on oxygen stable isotopic (? 18 O G. ruber ) signals from different areas of the Mediterranean Basin (Minorca Basin, central and south Tyrrhenian Sea, Taranto Gulf, south Adriatic Sea and Israel) has been proposed. The correlation of data testifies an almost synchronicity of the identified climate events, suggesting an homogeneous response of the marine system to climate oscillations. This overall picture documents that the collapse of the Western Roman Empire results chronologically related to cold event Roman III solar minima and that the Roman IV solar minimum (Dark Age), marks the transition vs a long term cooling trend, spanning ca. 1100 years, that culminates during the Maunder solar minimum (LIA). In addition, during the Maunder cold event, the strong increase in abundance of planktonic foraminifer Globlorotalia truncatulinoides, suggest the establishment of vertical mixing during the winter season induced by strong winds linked to an atmospheric blocking event.

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