Eocene temperature evolution of the tropical Atlantic Ocean

The transition from the early Eocene (~50 Ma) hothouse towards the Oligocene (~33 Ma) icehouse was interrupted by the Middle Eocene Climatic Optimum (MECO) (~40 Ma), a 500,000-year long episode of deep sea and Southern Ocean warming. It remains unclear whether this transient warming event was global...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Cramwinckel, M.J.
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/443424/
Description
Summary:The transition from the early Eocene (~50 Ma) hothouse towards the Oligocene (~33 Ma) icehouse was interrupted by the Middle Eocene Climatic Optimum (MECO) (~40 Ma), a 500,000-year long episode of deep sea and Southern Ocean warming. It remains unclear whether this transient warming event was global, and whether it was caused by changes in atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations or confined to high latitudes resulting from ocean circulation change. Here we show, based on biomarker paleothermometry applied at Ocean Drilling Program Site 959, offshore Ghana, that sea surface temperatures in the eastern equatorial Atlantic Ocean declined by ~7°C over the middle-late Eocene, in agreement with temperature trends documented in the southern high latitudes. In the equatorial Atlantic, this long-term trend was punctuated by ~2.5°C warming during the MECO. At the zenith of MECO warmth, changes in dinoflagellate cyst assemblages and laminated sediments at Site 959 point to open ocean hyperstratification and seafloor deoxygenation, respectively. Remarkably, the data reveal that the magnitude of temperature change in the tropics was approximately half that in the Southern Ocean. This suggests that the generally ice free Eocene yielded limited but significant polar amplification of climate change. Crucially, general circulation model (GCM) simulations reveal that the recorded tropical and deep ocean temperature trends are best explained by greenhouse gas forcing, controlling both middle-late Eocene cooling and the superimposed MECO warming.