The eastern Mediterranean climate at times of sapropel formation: a review
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Publication date
2007-10
Authors
Rohling, E.J.
Hilgen, F.J.
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Article
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Abstract
Sapropel formation in the eastern Mediterranean coincided closely with minima in the precession index.
Such minima occur approximately every 21000 years. At such times perihelion falls within Northern Hemisphere
summer. Minima in the precession index are characterized by intensified Indian Ocean (summer) SW
monsoonal circulation, which enhanced discharge of the river Nile into the eastern Mediterranean. However,
by compiling paleoclimatological data from the literature, the influence of the monsoon is shown to
have reached only as far as the southern Sinai Desert. Therefore, it does not account for contemporary humid
phases in the northern borderlands of the eastern Mediterranean, which seem to have been characterized
mainly by increased summer precipitation. We argue that increased (summer) precipitation along the northern
borderlands of the eastern Mediterranean, at times of sapropel formation, was probably due to increased
activity of Mediterranean (summer) depressions. Forming predominantly in the western Mediterranean and
tracking eastwards, such depressions tend to lower the excess of evaporation from the eastern Mediterranean
relative to that from the western basin. Picking up additional moisture along their eastward path, such depressions also redistribute freshwater within the complex eastern Mediterranean water balance. The increase
in runoff and the related flux of nutrients and continental organic matter that resulted from the increased
precipitation on the northern borderlands of the eastern Mediterranean, at times of sapropel formation,
presumably provided a substantial addition to that which entered the eastern Mediterranean via the
Nile.
Keywords
astronomical forcing, climate, eastern Mediterranean, sapropels