Introduction

A wide range of studies (e.g., refs. 1, 2) have shown that most of tropical Africa north of about 10° S was drier during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM; 23–19 ka), relative to today, and wetter during the early to mid Holocene, which has been defined3, 4 as the African Humid Period (AHP; ca. 11.5–5.5 ka). Abrupt precipitation changes during the glacial and deglacial are associated with major changes in the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) and sea surface temperature patterns2, 5. However, a large and abrupt aridification, with respect to gradual precessional insolation forcing, has also been documented at some sites during the Holocene at ~5.5 ka (the AHP termination)3, 4, the causes of which are currently unresolved. An abrupt AHP termination was originally thought to have been caused by a collapse of Saharan and Sahelian vegetation at 5.5 ka6 switching the climate to an arid equilibrium state. Many vegetation records, however, do not show a collapse4, 7 and the latest coupled climate models8 suggest the positive biogeophysical feedback was not strong enough to have triggered an abrupt climate switch. Complicating the picture, many hydrological records suggest a gradual (e.g., ref. 7) or time-transgressive9, 10 aridification at the AHP termination, more in line with a direct and linear response to precessional insolation forcing. Moreover, some intermediate complexity model simulations (e.g., ref. 11) have difficulty in simulating an abrupt AHP response and most fully coupled models underestimate the intensity of precipitation during the AHP9, 12. Overall, it is not resolved whether a rapid termination of the AHP was ubiquitous and synchronous at 5.5 ka, why this took place at 5.5 ka, and whether additional feedbacks or teleconnections were involved.

Precipitation in tropical Africa results from a combination of factors including the monsoonal on-land flow of moist air, low-level convergence of air at the intertropical convergence zone and, of particular importance, the deep vertical motion of air, which over northern Africa is modulated by the interaction of the Tropical Easterly Jet (TEJ) and the African Easterly Jet (AEJ)13. These jets oscillate seasonally and at present reach maximum latitudes of 6–8° N (TEJ) and 14–17° N (AEJ) in August13. The TEJ maximum windspeed is in the upper troposphere at ~150 hPa, while the AEJ maximum windspeed is in the mid-troposphere at ~600 hPa. The TEJ extends from India across the African continent (Fig. 1a, Supplementary Fig. 1) and is maintained by the upper tropospheric temperature gradient between the equatorial latitudes and the relatively warmer subtropics14. A slower TEJ is associated with drier conditions in these regions, due to reduced upper-level divergence and hence reduced upward vertical flow13, 15, 16. The AEJ is attributed to the meridional temperature gradient in the Sahel and a faster AEJ results in greater moisture export and drier conditions in the western Sahel13, 17. The African rainbelt oscillates across southern Cameroon twice a year, bringing most precipitation during northern hemisphere autumn (Sep–Oct–Nov; SON) and some during spring (Mar–Apr–May; MAM), while northern Cameroon and the Sahel receive precipitation primarily during summer (Jun–Jul–Aug; JJA; Fig. 1a).

Fig. 1
figure 1

Maps of the study area and climatology. a Colours represent mean monthly precipitation (mm) for the months Jun to Oct, the primary wet seasons for southern Cameroon and the Sahel. Red star marks the study site GeoB4905-4 (2°30.0´ N, 09°23.4´ E) in the Gulf of Guinea. Red dot marks the Gulf of Aden P178-15P core site4, white dots mark other sites discussed in the text and blue dots mark SST records from Supplementary Table 1. Black arrows mark position of TEJ and AEJ in summer13. Black box marks the inset. b Zoomed-in map of the study region showing C3–C4 vegetation distribution, rivers and bathymetry. Yellow dots mark the Douala, N’djamena, Niamey and Bangui GNIP stations, and Lake Ossa. Bathymetry shallower than 120 m is coloured in grey. c Monthly precipitation amount and δDp data for N’djamena, Chad and Doula, Cameroon27, highlighting the large seasonal δDp changes in the Sahel compared to equatorial regions. Error bars represent standard deviation (1σ) of monthly measurements

Sedimentary leaf-wax n-alkane δD (δDwax) has been shown to primarily reflect precipitation δD (δDp) in Cameroon and globally, and in the tropics is often taken to reflect precipitation amount18. While biosynthesis of leaf-wax n-alkanes is thought to exert a constant hydrogen isotope fractionation against leaf water, secondary controls on δDwax include relative humidity and vegetation type13. δDwax from C4 grasses is less sensitive to transpirational D enrichment in plant leaves, likely due to partial use of unenriched xylem water in n-alkane synthesis19. Other plant physiological differences such as the water source available to the plant and seasonal timing of leaf-wax biosynthesis may also influence δDwax values18. Higher relative humidity is thought to reduce evapotranspirational isotopic enrichment of leaf and soil waters, so that in the tropics relative humidity variability tends to amplify the δDwax variability that is driven by the amount effect18.

Sedimentary δ 13Cwax is often used as an indicator of C3 and C4 vegetation-type changes. African C3 trees, shrubs, herbs and lianas (n = 45) exhibit a mean (C29 n-alkane) δ 13Cwax value of −35.7‰ ± 2.9‰20 while African C4 grasses (n = 38) exhibit a mean δ 13Cwax value of −21.4‰ ± 2.0‰21. Much of the catchments of the Ntem, Nyong and Sanaga Rivers are dominated by C3 trees (Fig. 1b)22 and this is reflected in surface sediments of Lake Ossa, southern Cameroon (Fig. 1b), which exhibit a δ 13Cwax value of −35.4‰23. Conversely, further north, the Sahel-Sahara and much of the Niger River catchment are dominated by C4 plants (Fig. 1b)22, and this is evident in marine sediments off West Africa24.

To provide more insights into the AHP termination, we assess large-scale hydroclimatic changes in Cameroon and the central Sahel-Sahara using δDwax from a marine sediment core GeoB4905-4 in the Gulf of Guinea (Figs. 1a, b). We also assessed δ 13Cwax as an indicator for C3 vs. C4 vegetation type. Our results indicate high precipitation during the AHP followed by a rapid precipitation decrease at 5.8-4.8 ka, similar to a record from northern East Africa4. We show that the rapid precipitation decrease was likely triggered by northern high-latitude cooling. The cooling reduced the speed of the TEJ, triggering rainfall reduction that was amplified by climate feedbacks and resulted in strong aridification over a relatively short period.

Results

Moisture sources

To assess the likely moisture sources to present-day southern Cameroon, we performed analyses using the 3-D Lagrangian model FLEXPART25. The backward airmass trajectories (Fig. 2a–d) indicate the southeast Atlantic and central Sahel-Sahara to be the major moisture sources to southern Cameroon during the SON and MAM seasons. Forward analyses for the southeast Atlantic (Fig. 2e–h) and Sahel-Sahara (Fig. 2i–l) moisture sources reveal the spatial distribution and amount of precipitation that is generated by the moisture derived from these two sources. This shows that the southeast Atlantic and Sahel-Sahara moisture sources contribute 438 mm and 266 mm of precipitation to southern Cameroon, respectively, for SON season, and 1492 mm and 568 mm over the year.

Fig. 2
figure 2

Moisture sources for southern Cameroon and northern East Africa. ad FLEXPART84, 85 backward analyses of air mass trajectory for the period 1980–2015 at 0.25° resolution. The boxed region in southern Cameroon (9° E-14° E and 1° N-6° N) represents the estimated leaf-wax source region for Gulf of Guinea core GeoB4905-4. Colours represent the sources of moisture for the boxed region and show where E-P > 0 (mm day−1). eh Forward runs of FLEXPART for the southeast Atlantic moisture source (outlined with a red dashed line). Colours show precipitation derived from this moisture source (mm day−1). Numbers indicate total seasonal precipitation amount (mm) from this moisture-source delivered to the boxed regions in southern Cameroon and northern East Africa. The boxed region in northern East Africa represents the leaf-wax source region for the Gulf of Aden core P178-15P, estimated as 40° E-46° E and 7° N-14° N. il As eh but for the Sahel-Sahara moisture source (9° E–50° E and 6° N–20° N; marked with a red dashed rectangle). a, e, i represent Dec–Jan–Feb (DJF), b, f, j represent Mar–Apr–May (MAM), c, g, k represent Jun–Jul–Aug (JJA) and d, h, l represent Sep–Oct–Nov (SON)

δDwax and δ 13Cwax variability

We focus on the C29 n-alkane, denoted as δDwax and δ 13Cwax (Supplementary Notes 1 and 2). The δ 13Cwax values from GeoB4905-4 are generally low and display small variability, ranging between −33.5‰ and −30.3‰ (Supplementary Fig. 2). δDwax values have been adjusted for the effect of ice-volume and vegetation-type changes (Methods section; Fig. 3a, b), although this has a minor effect on the climate signal. The adjusted δDwax record (Fig. 3b) displays large variability and three main transitions. δDwax values were higher during the LGM (23–19 ka) relative to today. As indicated by SiZer analysis (Methods section; Fig. 4), this is followed by two periods of significant δDwax decrease: between 15.9 and 13.9 ka (the end of Heinrich Stadial 1; HS1) and between 12.5 and 11.5 ka (the end of the Younger-Dryas; Y-D). The mean rates of change for these two transition periods are 8‰ kyr−1 and 7‰ kyr−1, respectively (Fig. 3c). δDwax values remained low between 11.5 and 5.8 ka, corresponding to the AHP. Between 5.8 ka and 4.8 ka the record shows a significant δDwax increase (Figs. 3b, c and 4), associated with the AHP termination. In particular, there is a significant increase at lower bandwidths at 5.3 ka, indicating a particularly rapid drying at this time (Fig. 4). The mean rate of change during the AHP termination (5.8 ka and 4.8 ka) is 8‰ kyr−1.

Fig. 3
figure 3

δDwax from core GeoB4905-4 in the Gulf of Guinea. a Grey timeseries represents unadjusted δDwax. Error bars are individual analytical uncertainty. Shadings indicate 68 and 95% uncertainty bounds, including a mean analytical uncertainty of 3‰ and age uncertainty. Blue timeseries represents δDwax adjusted for ice volume, shading as above. b δDwax adjusted for ice-volume and vegetation-type changes, representing an estimate of past δDp. Shadings as above. Thick black line is the Ruppert-Sheather-Wand smooth, the optimal smoothing for the data set86. c Rate of change (‰ kyr−1) based on Ruppert-Sheather-Wand smooth. Blue colours representing periods of wettening, red represent periods of aridification. Red diamonds mark calibrated radiocarbon age control points. Vertical bars highlight the African Humid Period (AHP), Younger-Dryas (Y-D) and Heinrich Stadials 1 and 2 (HS1, HS2)

Fig. 4
figure 4

SiZer map for GeoB4905-4 δDwax. The y-axis represents the range of bandwidths (h) for which the data were smoothed (plotted on a log scale) and the x-axis represents age. Blue regions represent significant decreases in δDwax (wettening), red regions significant increases in δDwax (drying), purple regions no significant change, and grey areas indicate where the sampling resolution is too low. The black horizontal line represents the data-driven Ruppert-Sheather-Wand bandwidth86, the optimal smoothing (global bandwidth) for the entire data set. Time intervals where this line intersects with areas of significant increase or decrease are highlighted with vertical lines. δDwax is adjusted for ice volume and vegetation type

Origin of the δDwax signal

Relatively low δ 13Cwax values (mean of −32.3‰, range from −33.5‰ to −30.3‰; Supplementary Fig. 2) over the past 25 kyr suggest that leaf waxes were mainly derived from C3 vegetation. This agrees with previous work26 that the catchments of the Ntem, Nyong and Sanaga Rivers were the main source region of leaf-wax n-alkanes to the core site (Supplementary Note 2). Nonetheless, our data indicates a slightly higher C4 contribution than Lake Ossa surface sediment (−35.4‰; ref. 23) especially during the late Holocene. This points to an additional C4 contribution to the marine sediment that was probably delivered to the core site as Sahelian-Saharan dust (from, for example, the Bodélé depression) and/or Niger River material. Based on linear mixing with the above C3 and C4 end-members, δ 13Cwax values over the last 25 kyr would correspond to mean a C4 vegetation contribution of 24%, with a range between 15 and 41%.

The minor δ 13Cwax variability (Supplementary Fig. 2) suggests that vegetation type is unlikely to be the main control on δDwax, particularly for the large magnitude change between 5.8 and 4.8 ka, when δ 13Cwax shows little change. Rather than changes in vegetation, the δDwax record reflects changes in δDp. Tropical δDwax records are commonly interpreted as being controlled by the amount effect (e.g. ref. 4) with higher δDwax values representing drier conditions. Given that most leaf waxes originate from southern Cameroon with a smaller contribution from the Sahel, they likely reflect mainly southern Cameroon δDp and partly Sahel δDp. However, the amount effect can operate locally and non-locally, i.e., δDp from southern Cameroon can reflect the amount effect ‘upstream’ in the moisture-source region (thus integrating over a larger area than that of the leaf-wax source region). Given that annually almost 30% of the moisture in southern Cameroon originates from the central Sahel-Sahara (Fig. 2), it suggests δDp in southern Cameroon is significantly affected by hydroclimatic processes in the Sahel-Sahara. A further consideration is that the relationship between precipitation amount and δDp 27 is steeper at sites in the semi-arid regions of the Sahel compared to the equatorial regions (Supplementary Fig. 3), implying past precipitation changes in the Sahel would cause a larger δDp change than precipitation changes in southern Cameroon, potentially overprinting the southern Cameroon signal. Thus, changes in δDwax likely reflect integrated changes in precipitation amount in both southern Cameroon and the central Sahel-Sahara.

To understand the upstream signal over time, we investigated δDp over the last 25 ka using a transient simulation of the intermediate complexity isotope-enabled climate model iLOVECLIM (Methods section). The transient simulation displays a similar evolution of atmospheric δDp in southern Cameroon and the Sahel-Sahara (Supplementary Note 3), but a different evolution of precipitation amount in the two regions (Supplementary Fig. 4b–e). This suggests that in this model, southern Cameroon δDp is reflecting an integrated precipitation amount signal from both Cameroon and the central Sahel-Sahara.

Rapid deglacial and Holocene hydrological changes

The Gulf of Guinea δDwax record suggests slightly drier conditions at the LGM compared to the late Holocene (Fig. 3b). Cooler conditions at the LGM would suggest that the magnitude of aridification at the LGM relative to the late Holocene is likely to be conservative (Methods section). Drier LGM conditions are in line with most other hydroclimate records from northern Africa (e.g., ref. 1). Increased precipitation at the terminations of HS1 and the Y-D (Fig. 3b) is seen in other records across much of northern Africa north of ~10° S2. Both rapid increases are attributed to: CO2-driven deglacial tropical SST increase and atmospheric warming, increasing the moisture content of the atmosphere and; to AMOC resumption and northern high-latitude SST increase, allowing the rainbelt to penetrate further northwards2.

A more surprising finding in our Gulf of Guinea δDwax record is the rapid aridification between 5.8 and 4.8 ka with a particularly sharp drop at 5.3 ka (Figs. 3b, c and 4), which exhibits comparable rate of change and duration to changes at the termination of HS1 and the Y-D. Although our δDwax implies a large aridification between 5.8 and 4.8 ka, salinity changes in the Gulf of Guinea, which reflect Ntem, Nyong and Sanaga River discharge in southern Cameroon, display a smaller increase around this time28. This would suggest rapid aridification at the AHP termination was more prominent in the Sahel-Sahara than in southern Cameroon.

δDwax records from other regions

The rapid aridification at the AHP termination is similar to that observed between 5.4 ka and 4.5 ka4 in the Gulf of Aden, northern East Africa (Fig. 5b, c). The transitions are coeval, within the age uncertainty of the records (±0.3 kyr between 5.8 and 4.8 ka for the Gulf of Guinea record; ±0.1 kyr between 5.4 ka and 4.5 ka for the Gulf of Aden). The mean rate of change for the transition period is 5‰ kyr−1 for the Gulf of Aden record, comparable to the Gulf of Guinea record. The leaf-wax source region for the Gulf of Aden record mainly receives rainfall during JJA, and also receives a significant contribution of Sahel-Sahara moisture (Fig. 2i–l), suggesting that the rapid AHP termination was a feature spanning the latitudes of the Sahel during the JJA season. Given wetter conditions in the Sahel and Sahara during the mid-Holocene (e.g., refs. 1, 29), it is plausible that the Sahel-Sahara was a more important moisture source for Cameroon and northern East Africa during the AHP compared to today.

Fig. 5
figure 5

Comparison with other African δDwax records. a Mean JJA insolation at 10° N. b Gulf of Guinea δDwax from core GeoB4905-4 (based on the C29 n-alkane; ice-volume and vegetation adjusted; this study). c Gulf of Aden δDwax (based on the C30 fatty acid; ice-volume adjusted) from core P178-15P4. d Lake Victoria δDwax (based on the C28 fatty acid; ice volume adjusted)30. e Lake Tana δDwax (based on the C28 fatty acid; ice volume adjusted)31. f Lake Tanganyika δDwax (based on the C28 fatty acid; ice volume and vegetation adjusted)33. g Lake Bosumtwi δDwax (based on the C31 n-alkane; ice volume and vegetation adjusted)[10]. Shadings indicate 68 and 95% uncertainty bounds, including analytical and age uncertainty. Thick lines represent Ruppert-Sheather-Wand smooth: rate of change (‰ kyr−1) in b and c is based on this smooth

Other δDwax records from East Africa sometimes show a different evolution at the AHP termination, likely attributable to the seasonality of precipitation and/or moisture-source variability. Lake Victoria displays a relatively gradual δDwax increase from the early to late Holocene (Fig. 5d)30: the absence of a rapid change at around 5.5 ka may be because the main wet season at this site is during MAM, and thus δDp is unlikely to be influenced by Sahel-Sahara JJA moisture. Lake Tana (Fig. 5e) displays a rapid and large magnitude increase at ~8.5 ka, attributed to a reduction in Congo-basin derived recycled moisture31. This record displays, however, little δDwax change at 5.5 ka, although sedimentary Ti does show a major decrease at 5.5 ka32, indicating aridification and perhaps highlighting complex moisture-source effects on δDwax at this site. Lake Tanganyika (Fig. 5f) in eastern Central Africa displays a large and rapid δDwax increase between 5.7 ka and 4.4 ka33, in line with our record. Lake Tanganyika is located well south of the Sahel, and receives a minor amount of Sahel-Sahara moisture (Fig. 2i-l). The rapid δDwax increase may reflect local aridification, or, given that Lake Tanganyika is also susceptible to E-W moisture shifts34, may reflect central African moisture-source changes.

In West Africa, the crater lake Bosumtwi δDwax record10, was interpreted as reflecting reduced precipitation between ~9 ka and 5.5 ka, followed by a return to wet conditions at 5.5 ka and then termination of the AHP at ~3.5 ka (Fig. 5g). Lake Bosumtwi δDwax disagrees, however, with the Bosumtwi lake-level record, which was 110 m higher than today and overflowing the crater rim between 9 ka and 5.7 ka, followed by a lake-level decrease at some point between 5.7 ka and ca. 2.0 ka10. The lake-level decrease is thought to have resulted in input of material from the crater walls, as observed in radiocarbon measurements of the late Holocene35. Thus, it seems possible that post-highstand Bosumtwi δDwax may be partly biased by input of pre-aged leaf waxes, which could explain the difference to the GeoB4905-4 δDwax record. Offshore NW Africa, δDwax records have shown wet conditions during the AHP; in particular core GC37 displays aridification at about 5.5 ka9, similar to our record. This was interpreted as a rapid response at the AHP termination, although bioturbation was thought to be significant in these lower-resolution records, making direct comparisons difficult.

Insights from other hydrological proxies

Other proxies from Africa also sometimes show spatially variable responses at the AHP termination. The vegetation record of Lake Yoa was interpreted as representing a gradual aridification through the Holocene7. Persistence of wet conditions in this region after the AHP has, however, been attributed to the Tibesti Mountains acting as a ‘water tower’36. Compilations of past hydrology spanning the Sahel-Sahara have been interpreted as showing a heterogeneous response, with north-south10 and east-west29 differences in the timing of aridification. The compilations are, however, partly based on discontinuous records, that are less well dated compared to marine records, and include a range of different hydrological indicators, which together might explain this heterogeneity. Nonetheless, from our record we cannot rule out that the northernmost Sahara10 dried earlier than the southern Sahara and Sahel.

In support of our record, several other proxies provide additional evidence for a rapid end to the wet conditions of the AHP in the Sahel-Sahara. The lake-level record of Lake Mega-Chad displays high levels until ~5.2 ka, when the water balance rapidly decreased36. In NW Africa, the ODP658C dust record shows a very abrupt increase at 5.5 ka3, and other dust flux records show increases at around 4.9 ka37, although we note that dust may not necessarily be directly related to hydrology. In northern East Africa a large increase in the deposition of K-rich sediment, is evident between ~5.8 and 4.8 ka at Chew Bahir38, indicating aridification, similar to the drop in Ti at 5.5 ka at Lake Tana32. Also in northern East Africa, lake levels at Lakes Abhe39, Zibay Shalla40 and Abiyata41 display major decreases at about 4.5 ka, 5.0 ka and 5.4 ka, respectively. Therefore, overall, a number of records lend support to the hypothesis of a rapid AHP termination at about 5.5 ka covering the Sahel-Sahara and northern East Africa.

The role of biogeophysical feedbacks

Hydroclimate stability in the Sahel-Sahara during the AHP followed by a rapid aridification at 5.8–4.8 ka would not be in line with a response to local precessional insolation forcing, which began to decrease at around 9 ka (Fig. 5a). This raises the question of why climate remained wet until 5.8 ka and what caused the large-scale response at this time. Either internal climate feedbacks created a non-linear response to the external forcing due to a threshold in the system, or there was a teleconnection driving the rapid aridification beginning at 5.8 ka.

Sahel-Sahara vegetation and soil moisture are thought to exert a positive feedback effect, i.e., enhancing wetter conditions during the AHP8. However, these feedbacks are considered too weak to have caused a tipping point8, and thus would not themselves have been the initial trigger for the onset of aridification at 5.8 ka. Nonetheless, we do not rule out that these positive feedbacks enhanced the rate of aridification at the AHP termination once underway. Atmospheric dust is also believed to have been an important feedback in enhancing the wetness during the AHP42, and thus was potentially another factor enhancing aridification at the AHP termination.

Models indicate that lakes and wetlands may also constitute a positive feedback43 via modulation of the regional moisture balance. The rapid 100 m depth decrease of Lake Mega-Chad at about 5.2 ka36 would have reduced the lake area from the maximum estimated extent of 350,000 km2 44 towards the ‘pre-industrial’ [1960] value of 25,000 km2, perhaps reducing moisture contribution and enhancing the rapidity of AHP termination. Nonetheless, other studies suggest that the positive feedback from Lake Chad was weak due to the cool lake surface inhibiting deep convective precipitation45 and thus it also seems unlikely that lakes and wetlands were the sole trigger for the AHP termination.

An additional potential mechanism invokes tropical SST4. It was suggested that Indian Ocean SST decreased below a critical threshold at ~5.0 ka, substantially reducing tropical East African precipitation. However, SST records from both the western Indian Ocean (Supplementary Fig. 5a–c) and Gulf of Guinea (Supplementary Fig. 5d) do not show a significant SST change at this time, suggesting that tropical SSTs were not the trigger for the rapid precipitation decrease on the eastern or western sides of the continent.

Overall, models suggest that vegetation, soil moisture, dust, lake and wetland feedbacks, were not the critical trigger tipping the climate towards a drying state. It is possible that the models are simply deficient in representing these processes. Alternatively, it is possible that a trigger was needed from further afield within the climate system, to initiate the onset of feedbacks and the AHP termination. Because we see rapid aridification on the east and west sides of Africa (Fig. 5b,c), this trigger was likely teleconnected to a large-scale atmospheric circulation feature, such as the TEJ. We suggest that a TEJ slowdown was triggered by a cooling of the Northern Hemisphere mid- and high-latitudes.

High-latitude cooling triggered the AHP termination

A range of records from the northern high latitudes including Greenland46, the Norwegian sea47, 48 and the Fram Strait49, 50 indicate a rapid drop in summer temperature between ~6.0 and 5.0 ka. Other records also indicate an increase in Arctic sea ice50, 51 at about 5.5 ka. Empirical Orthogonal Function (EOF) analysis of temperature records from Canada and Greenland suggests an onset of rapid cooling at ~5.0 ka52. We performed EOF analysis of Holocene alkenone SST records from the Arctic and northeast Atlantic (Supplementary Table 1, Fig. 1a). Although the overall trend of the Principle Component 1 from the analysis is one of gradual insolation driven cooling, it does indicate more rapid cooling between about 6.0 and 5.5 ka than earlier or later in the Holocene (Fig. 6a). Rapid north Atlantic cooling at this time may have been related to an AMOC slowdown between ~6.0 and 5.0 ka53,54,55 (Fig. 6b). High-latitude cooling may also have been linked to increased Arctic sea-ice generation, that has been attributed to sea-level induced flooding of the Laptev Sea shelf at ~5.0 ka49, 56. Other studies suggested that between 6.0 and 5.0 ka an expanded polar vortex57 brought winter-like conditions to the mid-latitudes, evident in north America58. Cooling is evident in Europe59 and SSTs just to the north of Africa (Fig. 6c), suggesting that the cool anomaly expanded from the mid-high latitudes towards northern Africa with eastern boundary currents.

Fig. 6
figure 6

Comparison with mid- and high-latitude records. a Principle Component 1 (PC1) scores from eight alkenone SST records in the northern Atlantic (Supplementary Table 1). PC1 represents 57.8% of the variance. b δ13C of benthic foraminfera from core EN120-GGC1 in the north Atlantic, interpreted as a record of NADW formation and ocean circulation: lower values represent slower ocean circulation54. c Alkenone SST from core GeoB5901-2 in the Gulf of Cadiz, just to the north of Africa87. d δDwax from GeoB4905-4 (ice-volume and vegetation adjusted, this study). Shadings indicate 68 and 95% uncertainty bounds, including analytical and age uncertainty

To investigate how such a northern extratropical cooling affected African hydrology, we used a high-resolution version of the fully coupled CCSM3 climate model (Methods section). We simulated AHP conditions with an early Holocene (EH, 8.5 ka) control run, and subsequently initiated an extratropical North Atlantic cooling by a freshwater-induced slowdown of the AMOC (experiment EHfre). Note that a freshwater perturbation is a simple and common method to induce a cooling in the high northern latitudes and we do not imply a large input of freshwater at this time. In experiment EHfre, surface temperatures decrease by 0.5–2.5 °C in the northeastern North Atlantic compared to EH. The EH simulation clearly shows the TEJ at ~10° N and 150 hPa and the AEJ at ~20° N and 500–600 hPa (contours in Fig. 7c, d). The simulated EHfre–EH anomaly shows that the high- and mid-latitude JJA cooling (Fig. 7a, b) reaches northern Africa. The cool anomaly is evident throughout the troposphere in the northern Sahara from the western-to-central (10° E) and eastern (40° E) regions (Fig. 7a, b), acting to reduce the meridional gradient of upper tropospheric temperature between the Sahara and the equatorial latitudes. In accordance with the thermal wind relation, this weakens the TEJ (red shading in Fig. 7c, d), leading to reduced upper-level divergence. In the western-to-central region (10° E; Fig. 7c) the slowdown of the TEJ is particularly pronounced at its anticyclonic poleward flank, where the upper-level divergence is usually strongest60. This reduces upward vertical motions in the mid to upper troposphere at 16–23° N at 10° E and north of 12° N at 40° E (red and orange regions in Fig. 7e, f ) driving a reduction in precipitation at similar latitudes of the Sahel-Sahara (Fig. 7g, h). In addition to the upper tropospheric dynamical processes, surface cooling in the Saharan region is associated with a weakening of the Sahara Heat Low61, which reduces the westerly inflow and northward penetration of low-level moist monsoon winds (Fig. 7c, d) and hence moisture convergence. Drier conditions are further associated with a reduced low-level moist static energy and hence a more stable atmosphere, hampering deep convection61, 62. These mechanisms strongly agree with previous modern-day model experiments and instrumental/re-analysis data61,62,63, although in these experiments, the main area of drying was located further south in the Sahel and central Africa61, as would be expected in a situation when the Sahara is arid. In the model data63 it was found that the changes in the TEJ and Sahara Low tend to precede the change in precipitation, suggesting them to be a cause of rather than response to the change in Sahel rainfall. Additionally, during aridification, a shift of the soil moisture and meridional surface temperature gradient has been shown to strengthen the AEJ, further reducing rainfall across the west and central Sahel17, 64: thus the AEJ may represent an additional feedback contributing to the rapid aridification at 5.8–4.8 ka. Furthermore, models suggest that the high-latitude cooling was enhanced by the African precipitation decrease65, and this connection may have contributed to a tipping point behaviour of the two regions.

Fig. 7
figure 7

CCSM3 model output showing the effect of north Atlantic cooling on northern African winds and precipitation during the AHP. Height-latitude plots along longitudes 10° E (a, c, e, g) and 40° E (b, d, f, h) during JJA season. a, b Tropospheric temperature anomalies (°C) for the EHfre–EH experiment, highlighting the cool anomaly over the northern Sahara. c, d Zonal wind speed (m s−1), with contours representing the early Holocene control run (EH; negative values represent easterly winds). Shading represents anomalies (EHfre—EH): red region around 150 hPa is a negative easterly anomaly, blue region a positive easterly anomaly. e, f Vertical flow (Pa s−1), with contours representing the EH control run (negative values represent upward motion). Shading represents anomalies (EHfre—EH): red shows decreased upward motion, blue increased upward motion. g Precipitation anomalies (EHfre–EH; mm day−1) along 10° E. h Precipitation anomalies (EHfre–EH; mm day−1) along 40° E

Discussion

In comparison with the high- and mid-latitude temperature decrease at the AHP termination, the increase at the AHP onset was much larger (e.g., ref. 47), yet the magnitude of African hydrological change was similar (Fig. 3). This might be taken suggest that high- and mid-latitude temperature only played a secondary role in controlling African precipitation compared to local biogeophysical feedbacks. However, other factors including ice sheet retreat and tropical warming likely had an effect on African precipitation at the AHP onset, inhibiting a direct comparison. Nonetheless, it seems likely8, 42, 43 that vegetation, dust, lake and wetland feedbacks played a role in amplifying the hydroclimatic shifts at the AHP termination.

In summary, our findings suggest that the effect of rapid high- and mid-latitude temperature changes on tropical African hydroclimate was not restricted to the glacial and deglacial, but also played a decisive role in triggering the AHP termination. Teleconnection of high-mid latitude temperatures with the TEJ reduced JJA precipitation in the Sahel-Sahara, tipping the hydrological system towards an arid state. Although the high-latitude temperature changes were relatively small during the Holocene, the associated initial drying was the required trigger for vegetation, soil moisture, dust and lake feedbacks that together resulted in a large and rapid aridification. From these findings, it appears that future changes in high-latitude SST, in particular associated with sea-ice changes, may have strong implications for low-latitude hydroclimate66.

Methods

Sediment core and age model

Marine sediment core GeoB4905-4 was recovered at 2°30.0´ N, 09°23.4´ E from 1328 m water depth offshore Cameroon67. The age model of the core is based on 12 radiocarbon ages68, 69 that have been re-calibrated using the Marine13 curve with a reservoir age of 0.4 ± 0.1 kyr. The age-depth relationship was constructed using the software BACON 2.270 and represents the median of 10,000 iterations (Supplementary Fig. 6). The mean age uncertainty (1σ) over the last 25 ka is ± 0.3 kyr.

n-Alkane extraction and purification

Extraction and purification were performed at MARUM—Center for Marine Environmental Sciences, Bremen. Sediment samples of 10 ml were taken from core GeoB4905-4 with syringes, which yielded up to 9 g of dry sediment. Samples were oven dried at 40 °C, homogenised and squalane internal standard was added before extraction. Organic compounds were extracted with a DIONEX Accelerated Solvent Extractor (ASE 200) at 100 °C and 1000 psi using a 9:1 mixture of dichloromethane to methanol for 5 min, which was repeated three times. The saturated hydrocarbon fraction was obtained by elution of the dried lipid extract with hexane over a silica gel column (mesh size 60) followed by elution with hexane over AgNO3-coated silica to remove unsaturated hydrocarbons.

Isotopic analyses

Isotopic analyses were performed at MARUM—Center for Marine Environmental Sciences, Bremen. n-Alkane δ 13C analyses were carried out using a ThermoFisher Scientific Trace GC Ultra coupled to a Finnigan MAT 252 isotope ratio monitoring mass spectrometer via a combustion interface operated at 1000 °C. Isotope values were calibrated against external CO2 reference gas. The squalane internal standard yielded an accuracy of 0.4‰ and a precision of 0.2‰ (n = 371). Samples were run at least in duplicate, with a reproducibility of on average 0.1‰ for the C29 n-alkane. δD values of n-alkanes were measured using a ThermoFisher Scientific Trace GC coupled via a pyrolysis reactor operated at 1420 °C to a ThermoFisher MAT 253 isotope ratio mass spectrometer (GC/IR-MS). δD values were calibrated against external H2 reference gas. The squalane internal standard yielded an accuracy of 1‰ and a precision of 3‰ on average (n = 428). Samples were analysed at least in duplicate, with an average reproducibility of 1‰ for the C29 n-alkane. Repeated analysis of an external n-alkane standard between samples yielded a root-mean-squared accuracy of 2‰ and a standard deviation of on average 3‰. The H3-factor had a mean of 6.00 ± 0.02 and varied between 5.83 and 6.19 throughout analyses.

δDwax adjustments

We adjusted δDwax for ice volume (following e.g., ref. 4) using a seawater δ 18O curve71 and converting to δD assuming a Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) increase of 7.2‰ (Fig. 3a). We use 7.2‰ rather than 8‰ because sediment pore water δ 18O and δD measurements72 suggest that the glacial δD increase has a mean value of 7.2‰. We also adjusted the δDwax record for vegetation changes (e.g., ref. 73) using published fractionation factors (−123‰ ± 31‰ for C3 trees, −139‰ ± 27‰ for C4 grasses; ref. 18). End-member C29 δ 13Cwax values used for C3 and C4 vegetation were −35.7‰ and −21.4‰, respectively. The large uncertainties reflect different physiology, water source and seasonal timing of synthesis between plant types. This in turn highlights that a vegetation adjustment distinguishing only between C3 and C4 may not capture all potential vegetation changes, for example, between the input of shrubs, bushes and forbs that constitute a small fraction of the source areas74. Nonetheless, the highly integrated signal in marine sediments likely averages out much of the vegetation-type effect on δDwax, suggesting such an adjustment to be appropriate in this instance. Overall, the vegetation and ice-volume adjusted δDwax record (Fig. 3b) is similar to the unadjusted record (Fig. 3a), highlighting that the adjustments have a minor effect on the climate signal. Although δDwax records are sometimes adjusted for temperature75, it is difficult to estimate the past relationship between temperature and δDp. Given that the sea surface temperature record from GeoB4905-469 evolved similarly but in antiphase to δDwax, a temperature adjustment would act to enhance the magnitude of past δDwax changes, suggesting the estimated magnitude of past δDp changes to be conservative.

SiZer analysis

In order to assess the timing and significance of the transitions in our δDwax record, we performed a SiZer (Significant Zero crossings of derivatives) analysis76. This creates a family of Gaussian smooths for the data, and for each smooth identifies the time periods during which the derivative is significantly different from zero. To compare the rapidity of the transitions, we calculated the mean rate of change for these identified time periods.

Climate modelling

Investigations of the effect of high-latitude cooling on African hydroclimate were performed with simulations of a high-resolution version of the fully coupled Community Climate System Model version 3 (CCSM3). In this model version, the atmosphere model has a T85 (1.4° transform grid) resolution with 26 levels in the vertical, while the ocean has a nominal 1° horizontal resolution with 25 levels77. To study AHP conditions, we analysed a control simulation at 8.5 ka. In this early Holocene (EH) experiment, we used the orbital parameters and greenhouse gas concentrations for 8500 years before present (CO2 = 260 ppmv, CH4 = 660 ppbv, N2O = 260 ppbv)78. The EH experiment has been spun up over a period of 1400 years. In order to cool down the northern extratropics, a freshwater hosing was subsequently applied to the EH control run (experiment EHfre), in which freshwater at a rate of 0.2 Sv was injected into the northern North Atlantic for 400 years79. From both experiments (control and hosing) the last 100 years were taken and averaged for analyzes.

Investigations of the source of the atmospheric δDp signal were performed with a transient run of the intermediate complexity isotope-enabled climate model iLOVECLIM80,81,82. We studied the last 25 kyr of a 150 kyr simulation, which was run with the atmosphere at 5.6° resolution and used accelerated forcing (irradiance, GHGs and ice sheets were updated with an acceleration factor 10)83. Intermediate complexity models such as this have difficulty reproducing precipitation, but have the advantage of producing a continuous transient simulation of water isotopes for comparison with proxy data.

Code availability

CCSM3 source code is disseminated via the Earth System Grid (www.earthsystemgrid.org). Full model documentation is available at http://www.cesm.ucar.edu/models/ccsm3.0/.

The iLOVECLIM source code is based on the LOVECLIM model version 1.2, whose code is accessible at http://www.elic.ucl.ac.be/modx/elic/index.php?id=289. The developments on the iLOVECLIM source code are hosted at https://forge.ipsl.jussieu.fr/ludus, but are not publicly available due to copyright restrictions. Access can be granted on demand by request to D. M. Roche (didier.roche@lsce.ipsl.fr) to those who conduct research in collaboration with the iLOVECLIM users group.

Data availability

The datasets generated during the current study are available in the PANGAEA repository https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.880119.