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  1. null (Ed.)
  2. Abstract

    Determining what caused the global Last Glaciation and last glacial termination, despite opposing orbital summer insolation signatures between the polar hemispheres, remains a puzzle of paleoclimatology. This problem can be addressed by comparing chronologies of glaciation from different latitudes and different climatic regimes in both hemispheres. Here, we present a10Be surface‐exposure chronology of glacial landforms constructed during and since the local Last Glaciation in the continental environment of Central Asia in the high Mongolian Altai (49°N, 88°E). Four belts of lateral moraines document maximal phases of the former Khoton glacier at 35,440 ± 980 years ago, 23,430 ± 850 years ago, 20,780 ± 610 years ago, and 19,520 ± 550 years ago. Our chronology indicates that deglaciation from these maximal positions began as early as 18,810 ± 510 years ago, was well underway by 17,680 ± 510 years ago, and was nearly completed by 16,040 ± 490 years ago. Overall, our chronology shows that glaciation in western Mongolia overlapped with the global Last Glacial Maximum and that extensive recession from glacial‐to‐interglacial limits took place early in the last glacial termination during Heinrich Stadial 1. Khoton Nuur deglaciation led the demise of large Northern Hemisphere ice sheets and increases in radiative forcing agents by several millennia. We suggest that this rapid switch in the mode of glaciation implies the involvement of an additional climatic factor that could have produced locally rapid warming and deglaciation ∼18,800–16,000 years ago.

     
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