, around 16,000 years ago. Evolution of temperature in the Post-Glacial period since the
Last Glacial Period, according to the Greenland
ice cores. cores from the North Atlantic. Light violet line: δ18O from the NGRIP ice core (Greenland), permil (NGRIP members, 2004). Orange dots: temperature reconstruction for the NGRIP drilling site (Kindler
et al., 2014). Dark violet line: δ18O from the EDML ice core (Antarctica), permil (EPICA community members, 2006). Grey areas: major Heinrich events of mostly Laurentide origine (H1, H2, H4, H5). Grey hatch: major Heinrich events of mostly European origine (H3, H6). Light grey hatch and numbers C-14 to C-25: minor IRD layers registered in North Atlantic marine sediment cores (Chapman
et al., 1999). HS-1 to HS-10: Heinrich Stadial (HS, Heinrich, 1988; Rasmussen
et al., 2003; Rashid
et al., 2003). GS-2 to GS-24: Greenland Stadial (GS, Rasmussen
et al., 2014). AIM-1 to AIM-24: Antarctic Isotope Maximum (AIM, EPICA community members, 2006). Antarctica and Greenland ice core records are shown on their common timescale AICC2012 (Bazin
et al., 2013; Veres
et al., 2013).|upright=2 The strict definition of a Heinrich event is the climatic event causing the
ice rafted debris (IRD) layer observed in marine sediment cores from the
North Atlantic: a massive collapse of
Northern Hemisphere ice shelves and the consequent release of a prodigious volume of icebergs. By extension, the name can refer also to the associated climatic anomalies registered at other places around the globe at approximately the same time periods. The events are rapid and last probably less than a millennium, a duration varying from one event to the next, and their
abrupt onset may occur in mere years. Heinrich events are clearly observed in many North Atlantic marine sediment cores covering the
Last Glacial Period; the lower resolution of the sedimentary record before then makes it more difficult to deduce whether they occurred during other
glacial periods in the Earth's history. Some researchers identify the
Younger Dryas event as a Heinrich event, which would make it event H0 (
table, right). Heinrich events appear related to some but not all of the cold periods preceding the rapid warming events known as
Dansgaard–Oeschger events, which are best recorded in the
North Greenland Ice Core Project. However, difficulties in synchronising marine sediment cores and Greenland ice cores to the same time scale have raised questions as to the accuracy of that statement. == Potential climatic fingerprint of Heinrich events ==