Global cooling during the Eocene Oligocene Transition

About 34 million years ago, Earth's climate shifted from a relatively ice-free world to one with glacial conditions on Antarctica characterized by substantial ice sheets. How Earth's temperature changed during this climate transition remains poorly understood, and evidence for Northern Hem...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Liu, Zhonghui, Pagani, Mark, Zinniker, David, DeConto, Robert M, Huber, Matthew, Brinkhuis, Henk, Shah, Sunita R, Leckie, R Mark, Pearson, Ann
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: PANGAEA 2009
Subjects:
ODP
Online Access:https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.771853
https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.771853
Description
Summary:About 34 million years ago, Earth's climate shifted from a relatively ice-free world to one with glacial conditions on Antarctica characterized by substantial ice sheets. How Earth's temperature changed during this climate transition remains poorly understood, and evidence for Northern Hemisphere polar ice is controversial. Here, we report proxy records of sea surface temperatures from multiple ocean localities and show that the high-latitude temperature decrease was substantial and heterogeneous. High-latitude (45 degrees to 70 degrees in both hemispheres) temperatures before the climate transition were ~20°C and cooled an average of ~5°C. Our results, combined with ocean and ice-sheet model simulations and benthic oxygen isotope records, indicate that Northern Hemisphere glaciation was not required to accommodate the magnitude of continental ice growth during this time.