Southern Ocean bottom water cooling and ice sheet expansion during the middle Miocene climate transition

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Date
2020-12-18Type
- Working Paper
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Abstract
The middle Miocene climate transition (MMCT, ~14.5–13.0 Ma) was associated with a significant expansion of Antarctic ice, but the mechanisms triggering the event remain enigmatic. We present a new clumped isotope (∆47) bottom water temperature (BWT) record from 16.0 Ma to 12.2 Ma from Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Site 747 in the Southern Ocean, and compare it to existing BWT records. We show that BWTs in the Southern Ocean were ~8–10 °C during the middle Miocene greenhouse, and thus considerably warmer than today. Nonetheless, bottom water δ18O (calculated from foraminiferal δ18O and ∆47) suggests substantial amounts of land ice throughout the interval of the study. Our dataset demonstrates that BWTs at Site 747 decreased by ~3–5 °C across the MMCT. This cooling preceded the stepped main increase in global ice volume, and appears to have been followed by a transient bottom water warming starting during or slightly after the main ice volume increase. We speculate that a regional freshening of the upper water column at this time may have increased stratification and reduced bottom water heat loss to the atmosphere, counteracting global cooling in the bottom waters of the Southern Ocean and possibly even at larger scales. Additional processes and feedbacks required for substantial ice growth may have contributed to the observed decoupling of Southern Ocean BWT and global ice volume. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000464550Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Climate of the Past DiscussionsPublisher
Copernicus PublicationsOrganisational unit
09601 - Stoll, Heather / Stoll, Heather
08806 - Bernasconi, Stefano (Tit.-Prof.)
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Is previous version of: https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000514088
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