The Mid-Pleistocene Transition induced by delayed feedback and bistability
Courtney Quinn, Jan Sieber, Anna S. von der Heydt, Timothy M. Lenton

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that the Mid-Pleistocene Transition can be explained by a delayed feedback climate model that exhibits bistability and switches between oscillation modes under astronomical forcing, aligning with paleoclimate data.
Contribution
It shows that a delayed feedback model with bistability can reproduce the MPT as a forcing-induced transition without changing internal parameters.
Findings
Delayed feedback causes bistability in ice volume dynamics.
Astronomical forcing induces a switch from 41 kyr to 100 kyr cycles.
The transition aligns with the timing of the Mid-Pleistocene Transition.
Abstract
The Mid-Pleistocene Transition, the shift from 41 kyr to 100 kyr glacial-interglacial cycles that occurred roughly 1 Myr ago, is often considered as a change in internal climate dynamics. Here we revisit the model of Quaternary climate dynamics that was proposed by Saltzman and Maasch (1988). We show that it is quantitatively similar to a scalar equation for the ice dynamics only when combining the remaining components into a single delayed feedback term. The delay is the sum of the internal times scales of ocean transport and ice sheet dynamics, which is on the order of 10 kyr. We find that, in the absence of astronomical forcing, the delayed feedback leads to bistable behaviour, where stable large-amplitude oscillations of ice volume and an equilibrium coexist over a large range of values for the delay. We then apply astronomical forcing. We perform a systematic study to show how the…
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