Technology

Sudden cooling in Greenland reduced summer monsoons in India 8,200 years ago: Study

Around 8,200 years ago, a drop in the temperature in Greenland, located at one end of the globe, triggered a decline in the intensity of the Indian Summer Monsoons (ISM), a study by Indian researchers has revealed.

The ‘8.2 ka cooling event’ is the largest climatic excursion of the Holocene from the perspective of Greenland temperature change. Temperature dropped by 3 degrees Celsius in Greenland, and methane declined by 80 parts per billion by volume, which suggests an important change in the hydrologic cycle, according to the study.

“The weakened monsoon during the 8.2 ka interval suggests a powerful tele-connection or an atmospheric and oceanic link between the North Atlantic and the ISM. It indicated that cooling in Greenland caused disruptions in Atlantic circulation that may have shifted global wind belts and weakened monsoons in the Northern Hemisphere, thereby reducing rainfall over India” the ministry said.

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