The interglacial period that occurred about 400,000 years ago—Marine Isotope Stage 11—was the longest out of the past five glacial cycles. A proxy-based alignment of this interglacial with the Holocene, and a subsequent analysis of carbon isotopic data from marine sediments, indicates that the unusual length may have been driven by strong poleward oceanic heat transport.
- Alexander J. Dickson
- Christopher J. Beer
- Richard D. Pancost