Nil Irvali
Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research
14 Papers
10 Citations
Nil Irvali is an academic researcher from Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Interglacial & North Atlantic Deep Water. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 11 publications. Previous affiliations of Nil Irvali include University of Bergen & Istanbul Technical University.
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Papers
Rapid Reductions in North Atlantic Deep Water During the Peak of the Last Interglacial Period
Eirik Vinje Galaasen,Ulysses S Ninnemann,Nil Irvali,Helga F Kleiven,Yair Rosenthal,Catherine Kissel,David A. Hodell +6 more
TL;DR: Using a subcentennially resolved epibenthic foraminiferal δ13C record, it is shown that the influence of North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) was strong at the onset of the last interglacial period and was then interrupted by several prominent centennial-scale reductions.
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Asynchronous Antarctic and Greenland ice-volume contributions to the last interglacial sea-level highstand
Eelco J. Rohling,Eelco J. Rohling,Fiona D. Hibbert,Katharine M. Grant,Eirik Vinje Galaasen,Nil Irvali,Helga F Kleiven,Gianluca Marino,Gianluca Marino,Ulysses S Ninnemann,Andrew P. Roberts,Yair Rosenthal,Hartmut Schulz,Felicity Williams,Jimin Yu +14 more
TL;DR: Data show that the Antarctic Ice Sheet dominated particularly high levels of sea-level rise during the early Last Interglacial, and a dual substructure within the first highstand suggests temporal variability in the AIS contributions.
Rapid switches in subpolar North Atlantic hydrography and climate during the Last Interglacial (MIS 5e)
Nil Irvali,Ulysses S Ninnemann,Eirik Vinje Galaasen,Yair Rosenthal,Dick Kroon,Delia W Oppo,Helga F Kleiven,Kathryn Darling,Catherine Kissel +8 more
TL;DR: The authors suggest that switches in the subpolar gyre hydrography occurred during a warmer climate, involving regional changes in freshwater fluxes/balance and East Greenland Current influence in the study area.
Interglacial instability of North Atlantic Deep Water ventilation.
Eirik Vinje Galaasen,Ulysses S Ninnemann,Augustin Kessler,Nil Irvali,Yair Rosenthal,Jerry Tjiputra,Nathaelle Bouttes,Didier M. Roche,Didier M. Roche,Helga F Kleiven,David A. Hodell +10 more
TL;DR: It is reported that episodes of reduced NADW over the past 500,000 years actually have been relatively common and occasionally long-lasting features of interglacials and that they can occur independently of the catastrophic freshwater outburst floods normally thought to be their cause.
Evidence for regional cooling, frontal advances, and East Greenland Ice Sheet changes during the demise of the last interglacial
Nil Irvali,Nil Irvali,Ulysses S Ninnemann,Ulysses S Ninnemann,Helga F Kleiven,Helga F Kleiven,Eirik Vinje Galaasen,Eirik Vinje Galaasen,Audrey Morley,Yair Rosenthal +9 more
TL;DR: In this article, high-resolution lithic and sea surface climate records are used to portray the progression of North Atlantic climate, hydrography, and Greenland Ice Sheet (GIS) activity through the peak of Marine Isotope Stage (MIS 5e into the last glacial inception.
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