“…Over the past 15 years, the analysis of stable oxygen isotope (δ 18 O) and magnesium to calcium (Mg/Ca) ratios in individual shells of planktic foraminifera—termed individual foraminiferal analyses (IFA, Thirumalai et al., 2013)—has gained momentum as a powerful tool to reconstruct seasonal and/or interannual oceanic (and climatic) variability in various oceanographic settings. IFA data have laid the foundations for a deeper understanding of high‐frequency climate variability in the past, for example, the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) system (Ford et al., 2015; Khider et al., 2011; Koutavas & Joanides, 2012a; Koutavas et al., 2006; Leduc et al., 2009; Rustic et al., 2020; Scroxton et al., 2011; White et al., 2018), seasonality in the North Atlantic Ocean and Arabian Sea (Brummer et al., 2020; Metcalfe et al., 2019; Naidu et al., 2019), the recently hypothesized equatorial Indian Ocean mode of variability during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM, Thirumalai et al., 2019b). One emerging paradigm from IFA studies points to the mean state of global (and regional) climate as a modulator of the superimposed, shorter‐term climate variability (Ford et al., 2015; Rustic et al., 2020; Thirumalai et al., 2019b).…”