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Branched glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraethers (brGDGTs) are membrane-spanning lipids synthesized by bacteria in numerous substrates. The degree of methylation of the five methyl brGDGTs in both soils and lake sediments, described by the MBT′5Me index, is empirically related to surface atmospheric temperature. This relationship in lakes is generally assumed to reflect lake surface temperatures captured by brGDGT production in the water column and exported to lake sediments, and the MBT′5Me index has been applied to brGDGTs in lake sediment successions to reconstruct changes in temperature through time. We analyzed the relationship between MBT′5Me and the isomerization of brGDGTs (IR6Me) in globally distributed surficial lake sediments and demonstrated that the relationship, and calibrations, of MBT′5Me and temperature in middle and high latitude lakes are sensitive to incompletely understood factors related to IR6Me. IR6Me does not appear to track a non-thermal influence of brGDGT methylation in tropical lakes, but this could change as the data set is expanded. We address ongoing challenges in the application of the MBT′5Me paleothermometer in middle and high latitude lakes with new MBT′5Me-temperature calibrations based on grouping lakes by IR6Me. We demonstrate how IR6Me can distinguish samples with a significant non-thermal influence on MBT′5Me by targeting anomalously warm temperatures during the Last Glacial Maximum from newly analyzed piston and gravity core samples from Lake Baikal, Russia.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available March 1, 2026
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Global warming during the Last Glacial Termination was interrupted by millennial-scale cool intervals such as the Younger Dryas and the Antarctic Cold Reversal (ACR). Although these events are well characterized at high latitudes, their impacts at low latitudes are less well known. We present high-resolution temperature and hydroclimate records from the tropical Andes spanning the past ~16,800 y using organic geochemical proxies applied to a sediment core from Laguna Llaviucu, Ecuador. Our hydroclimate record aligns with records from the western Amazon and eastern and central Andes and indicates a dominant long-term influence of changing austral summer insolation on the intensity of the South American Summer Monsoon. Our temperature record indicates a ~4 °C warming during the glacial termination, stable temperatures in the early to mid-Holocene, and slight, gradual warming since ~6,000 y ago. Importantly, we observe a ~1.5 °C cold reversal coincident with the ACR. These data document a temperature change pattern during the deglaciation in the tropical Andes that resembles temperatures at high southern latitudes, which are thought to be controlled by radiative forcing from atmospheric greenhouse gases and changes in ocean heat transport by the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation.more » « less
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Abstract Understanding eastern African paleoclimate is critical for contextualizing early human evolution, adaptation, and dispersal, yet Pleistocene climate of this region and its governing mechanisms remain poorly understood due to the lack of long, orbitally-resolved, terrestrial paleoclimate records. Here we present leaf wax hydrogen isotope records of rainfall from paleolake sediment cores from key time windows that resolve long-term trends, variations, and high-latitude effects on tropical African precipitation. Eastern African rainfall was dominantly controlled by variations in low-latitude summer insolation during most of the early and middle Pleistocene, with little evidence that glacial–interglacial cycles impacted rainfall until the late Pleistocene. We observe the influence of high-latitude-driven climate processes emerging from the last interglacial (Marine Isotope Stage 5) to the present, an interval when glacial–interglacial cycles were strong and insolation forcing was weak. Our results demonstrate a variable response of eastern African rainfall to low-latitude insolation forcing and high-latitude-driven climate change, likely related to the relative strengths of these forcings through time and a threshold in monsoon sensitivity. We observe little difference in mean rainfall between the early, middle, and late Pleistocene, which suggests that orbitally-driven climate variations likely played a more significant role than gradual change in the relationship between early humans and their environment.more » « less
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