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Milankovitch theory and monsoon

Cheng, Hai ; Li, Hanying ; Sha, Lijuan ; Sinha, Ashish ; Shi, Zhengguo ; Yin, Qiuzhen ; Lu, Zhengyao LU ; Zhao, Debo ; Cai, Yanjun and Hu, Yongyun , et al. (2022) In The Innovation 3(6).
Abstract

The widely accepted “Milankovitch theory” explains insolation-induced waxing and waning of the ice sheets and their effect on the global climate on orbital timescales. In the past half century, however, the theory has often come under scrutiny, especially regarding its “100-ka problem.” Another drawback, but the one that has received less attention, is the “monsoon problem,” which pertains to the exclusion of monsoon dynamics in classic Milankovitch theory even though the monsoon prevails over the vast low-latitude (∼30° N to ∼30° S) region that covers half of the Earth's surface and receives the bulk of solar radiation. In this review, we discuss the major issues with the current form of Milankovitch theory and the progress made at the... (More)

The widely accepted “Milankovitch theory” explains insolation-induced waxing and waning of the ice sheets and their effect on the global climate on orbital timescales. In the past half century, however, the theory has often come under scrutiny, especially regarding its “100-ka problem.” Another drawback, but the one that has received less attention, is the “monsoon problem,” which pertains to the exclusion of monsoon dynamics in classic Milankovitch theory even though the monsoon prevails over the vast low-latitude (∼30° N to ∼30° S) region that covers half of the Earth's surface and receives the bulk of solar radiation. In this review, we discuss the major issues with the current form of Milankovitch theory and the progress made at the research forefront. We suggest shifting the emphasis from the ultimate outcomes of the ice volume to the causal relationship between changes in northern high-latitude insolation and ice age termination events (or ice sheet melting rate) to help reconcile the classic “100-ka problem.” We discuss the discrepancies associated with the characterization of monsoon dynamics, particularly the so-called “sea-land precession-phase paradox” and the “Chinese 100-ka problem.” We suggest that many of these discrepancies are superficial and can be resolved by applying a holistic “monsoon system science” approach. Finally, we propose blending the conventional Kutzbach orbital monsoon hypothesis, which calls for summer insolation forcing of monsoons, with Milankovitch theory to formulate a combined “Milankovitch-Kutzbach hypothesis” that can potentially explain the dual nature of orbital hydrodynamics of the ice sheet and monsoon systems, as well as their interplays and respective relationships with the northern high-latitude insolation and inter-tropical insolation differential.

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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
The Innovation
volume
3
issue
6
article number
100338
publisher
Cell Press
external identifiers
  • pmid:36353675
  • scopus:85140969639
ISSN
2666-6758
DOI
10.1016/j.xinn.2022.100338
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
92567baa-7a15-4556-a037-b1c8a68959f2
date added to LUP
2022-12-06 10:05:18
date last changed
2024-04-18 15:59:53
@article{92567baa-7a15-4556-a037-b1c8a68959f2,
  abstract     = {{<p>The widely accepted “Milankovitch theory” explains insolation-induced waxing and waning of the ice sheets and their effect on the global climate on orbital timescales. In the past half century, however, the theory has often come under scrutiny, especially regarding its “100-ka problem.” Another drawback, but the one that has received less attention, is the “monsoon problem,” which pertains to the exclusion of monsoon dynamics in classic Milankovitch theory even though the monsoon prevails over the vast low-latitude (∼30° N to ∼30° S) region that covers half of the Earth's surface and receives the bulk of solar radiation. In this review, we discuss the major issues with the current form of Milankovitch theory and the progress made at the research forefront. We suggest shifting the emphasis from the ultimate outcomes of the ice volume to the causal relationship between changes in northern high-latitude insolation and ice age termination events (or ice sheet melting rate) to help reconcile the classic “100-ka problem.” We discuss the discrepancies associated with the characterization of monsoon dynamics, particularly the so-called “sea-land precession-phase paradox” and the “Chinese 100-ka problem.” We suggest that many of these discrepancies are superficial and can be resolved by applying a holistic “monsoon system science” approach. Finally, we propose blending the conventional Kutzbach orbital monsoon hypothesis, which calls for summer insolation forcing of monsoons, with Milankovitch theory to formulate a combined “Milankovitch-Kutzbach hypothesis” that can potentially explain the dual nature of orbital hydrodynamics of the ice sheet and monsoon systems, as well as their interplays and respective relationships with the northern high-latitude insolation and inter-tropical insolation differential.</p>}},
  author       = {{Cheng, Hai and Li, Hanying and Sha, Lijuan and Sinha, Ashish and Shi, Zhengguo and Yin, Qiuzhen and Lu, Zhengyao and Zhao, Debo and Cai, Yanjun and Hu, Yongyun and Hao, Qingzhen and Tian, Jun and Kathayat, Gayatri and Dong, Xiyu and Zhao, Jingyao and Zhang, Haiwei}},
  issn         = {{2666-6758}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{6}},
  publisher    = {{Cell Press}},
  series       = {{The Innovation}},
  title        = {{Milankovitch theory and monsoon}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.xinn.2022.100338}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.xinn.2022.100338}},
  volume       = {{3}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}