Oligocene to Miocene terrestrial climate change and the demise of forests on Wilkes Land, East Antarctica

The question whether Cenozoic climate was warm enough to support a substantial vegetation cover on the Antarctic continent is of great significance to the ongoing controversial debate on the dynamic behaviour of Antarctic land ice during the transition from a greenhouse to an icehouse world. Here we...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Salzmann, Ulrich, Strother, Stephanie, Sangiorgi, Francesca, Bijl, Peter, Pross, Jorg, Woodward, John, Escutia, Carlota, Brinkhuis, Henk
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://nrl.northumbria.ac.uk/id/eprint/26472/
http://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2016/EGU2016-2717.pdf
https://nrl.northumbria.ac.uk/id/eprint/26472/1/EGU2016-2717.pdf
Description
Summary:The question whether Cenozoic climate was warm enough to support a substantial vegetation cover on the Antarctic continent is of great significance to the ongoing controversial debate on the dynamic behaviour of Antarctic land ice during the transition from a greenhouse to an icehouse world. Here we present palynological results from an Oligocene to Miocene sediment record provided by the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Expedition 318 to the Wilkes Land margin (East Antarctica). The Oligocene assemblages (33.9-23 Ma) are dominated by pollen and spores from temperate forest and sub-Antarctic shrub vegetation inhabiting different altitudinal zones. These include a lowland cold temperate forest with Dacrydium and Lagarostrobos (both common in southern forests of New Zealand and Tasmania today) and a high altitude tundra shrubland comprising Microcachrys, Nothofagus (southern beech) and Podocarpaceae conifers. A decline in pollen percentages of Dacrydium and Lagarostrobos and absence of Proteaceae indicate climate cooling during the late Oligocene (�25-23 Ma). However, the continuous presence of Lagarostrobos suggests that the full transition to a tundra environment had not yet occurred and climate on Wilkes Land during the late Oligocene was still warm enough to support forest vegetation in sheltered areas. Temperature reconstructions derived from the fossil pollen assemblages using the Coexistence Approach suggest mean annual temperatures (MATs) between 6.7-13.7�C during the early Oligocene and a drop of minimum MATs to 5.8�C in the late Oligocene. Pollen of “unambiguous” forest indicators, such as Lagarostrobos, are absent in the Miocene sediment record (16.2 -12.5 Ma) but temperatures were still high enough (minimum MATs > 5�C) to sustain a woody sub-Antarctic vegetation under partially ice-free conditions. Wilkes Land provides a unique record of Antarctic vegetation change from a subtropical, highly diverse Eocene rainforest to an Oligocene cold temperate forest and an impoverished Miocene sub Antarctic ...