Millennial-scale variability of the Antarctic ice sheet during the early Miocene

Author:

Sullivan Nicholas B.1ORCID,Meyers Stephen R.1ORCID,Levy Richard H.23ORCID,McKay Robert M.2ORCID,Golledge Nicholas R.2ORCID,Cortese Giuseppe3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geoscience, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706

2. Antarctic Research Centre, Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington 6012, New Zealand

3. Geological and Nuclear Science, Lower Hutt 5040, New Zealand

Abstract

Millennial-scale ice sheet variability (1–15 kyr periods) is well documented in the Quaternary, providing insight into critical atmosphere–ocean–cryosphere interactions that can inform the mechanism and pace of future climate change. Ice sheet variability at similar frequencies is comparatively less known and understood prior to the Quaternary during times, where higher atmospheric p CO 2 and warmer climates prevailed, and continental-scale ice sheets were largely restricted to Antarctica. In this study, we evaluate a high-resolution clast abundance dataset (ice-rafted debris) that captures East Antarctic ice sheet variability in the western Ross Sea during the early Miocene. This dataset is derived from a 100 m-thick mudstone interval in the ANtarctic DRILLing (ANDRILL or AND) core 2A, which preserves a record of precession and eccentricity variability. The sedimentation rates are of appropriate resolution to also characterize the signature of robust, subprecession cyclicity. Strong sub-precession (~10 kyr) cyclicity is observed, with an amplitude modulation in lockstep with eccentricity, indicating a relationship between high-frequency Antarctic ice sheet dynamics and astronomical forcing. Bicoherence analysis indicates that many of the observed millennial-scale cycles (as short as 1.2 kyr) are associated with nonlinear interactions (combination or difference tones) between each other and the Milankovitch cycles. The presence of these cycles during the Miocene reveals the ubiquity of millennial-scale ice sheet variability and sheds light on the interactions between Earth’s atmosphere, ocean, and ice in climates warmer than the Quaternary.

Funder

Columbia | LDEO | U.S. Science Support Program, Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory

National Science Foundation

Heising-Simons Foundation

New Zealand Antarctic Research Institute

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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