Oceanography of the Eastern Equatorial Pacific Ocean Across the Oligocene‐Miocene Transition

Author:

Liebrand Diederik12ORCID,Wade Bridget S.3ORCID,Beddow Helen M.45ORCID,King David J.3ORCID,Harrison Alexander D.6ORCID,Johnstone Heather J. H.7ORCID,Drury Anna Joy38ORCID,Pälike Heiko7ORCID,Sluijs Appy4ORCID,Lourens Lucas J.4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences The University of Manchester Manchester UK

2. PalaeoClimate.Science Mirfield UK

3. Department of Earth Sciences University College London London UK

4. Department of Earth Sciences Faculty of Geosciences Utrecht University Utrecht The Netherlands

5. Now at Global Canopy Cambridge UK

6. School of Earth and Environment University of Leeds Leeds UK

7. MARUM—Center for Marine Environmental Science University of Bremen Bremen Germany

8. School of Geography, Geology, and the Environment University of Leicester Leicester UK

Abstract

AbstractThe functioning of the Pacific Ocean—the world's largest ocean—during a warmer‐than‐present paleoclimate state remains underexplored. We present planktonic and benthic foraminiferal stable oxygen (δ18O) and carbon (δ13C) isotope records from Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) Site U1334 that span the Oligocene‐Miocene Transition (OMT) interval, from 24.15 to 21.95 million years ago (Ma). We reconstruct (sub‐)surface and deep‐water conditions and provide better constraints on the physical and chemical oceanography of the eastern equatorial Pacific Ocean (EEP). Positive trends in planktonic and benthic foraminiferal δ18O values, mark a largely uniform imprint of increased land‐ice volume/global cooling on surface‐ and deep‐waters. We document a delayed planktonic foraminiferal δ18O increase across the OMT as well as an increase in the amplitude variability of planktonic foraminiferal δ18O values on eccentricity timescales during the early Miocene. We interpret this as an enhanced glacioeustatic sea‐level control on Atlantic‐Pacific salinity exchange through the Central American Seaway (CAS) or as the onset of more variable surface currents and oceanic fronts in the EEP. Positive trends in planktonic and benthic foraminiferal δ13C values characterize the whole‐ocean depletion in 12C linked to organic carbon burial during the Oligocene‐Miocene carbon maximum (CM‐OM). However, this depletion is more pronounced in the planktonic foraminiferal δ13C record, especially during ∼400 Kyr eccentricity minima, reflecting an increase in nutrient upwelling and the efficacy of the biological carbon pump (BCP) when global temperatures decreased across the OMT and during the early Miocene. Our study highlights the dynamic behavior of the EEP in a warmer‐than‐present unipolar icehouse state.

Funder

University of Leeds

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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