Climate Evolution Through the Onset and Intensification of Northern Hemisphere Glaciation

Author:

McClymont E. L.1ORCID,Ho S. L.2ORCID,Ford H. L.3ORCID,Bailey I.4ORCID,Berke M. A.5,Bolton C. T.6ORCID,De Schepper S.7ORCID,Grant G. R.8ORCID,Groeneveld J.29ORCID,Inglis G. N.10ORCID,Karas C.11ORCID,Patterson M. O.12ORCID,Swann G. E. A.13ORCID,Thirumalai K.14ORCID,White S. M.15ORCID,Alonso‐Garcia M.16ORCID,Anand P.17ORCID,Hoogakker B. A. A.18ORCID,Littler K.1920ORCID,Petrick B. F.21,Risebrobakken B.7ORCID,Abell J. T.14ORCID,Crocker A. J.10ORCID,de Graaf F.3ORCID,Feakins S. J.22ORCID,Hargreaves J. C.23,Jones C. L.10ORCID,Markowska M.24,Ratnayake A. S.25ORCID,Stepanek C.26ORCID,Tangunan D.27ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geography Durham University Durham UK

2. Institute of Oceanography National Taiwan University Taipei Taiwan

3. School of Geography Queen Mary University of London London UK

4. Camborne School of Mines University of Exeter Penryn UK

5. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Earth Sciences University of Notre Dame Notre Dame IN USA

6. Aix Marseille University CNRS, IRD, INRAE, CEREGE Aix‐en‐Provence France

7. NORCE Climate and Environment NORCE Norwegian Research Centre Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research Bergen Norway

8. Department of Surface Geosciences GNS Science Lower Hutt New Zealand

9. Department of Geology Hamburg University Hamburg Germany

10. School of Ocean and Earth Science National Oceanography Centre Southampton University of Southampton Southampton UK

11. Universidad de Santiago de Chile Santiago Chile

12. Department of Geological Sciences and Environmental Studies Binghamton University Binghamton NY USA

13. School of Geography University of Nottingham Nottingham UK

14. Department of Geosciences The University of Arizona Tucson AZ USA

15. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences University of California Santa Cruz CA USA

16. Department of Geology Universidad de Salamanca Salamanca Spain

17. School of Environment Earth and Ecosystem Sciences The Open University Milton Keynes UK

18. The Lyell Centre Heriot‐Watt University Edinburgh UK

19. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences University of Exeter Penryn UK

20. Environment and Sustainability Institute University of Exeter Penryn UK

21. Institute of Geosciences Kiel University Kiel Germany

22. Department of Earth Science University of Southern California Los Angeles CA USA

23. Blue Skies Research Ltd Settle UK

24. Climate Geochemistry Max Planck Institute for Chemistry Mainz Germany

25. Department of Applied Earth Sciences Uva Wellassa University Badulla Sri Lanka

26. Department for Paleoclimate Dynamics Alfred Wegener Institute—Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research Bremerhaven Germany

27. School of Earth and Environmental Sciences Cardiff University Cardiff UK

Abstract

AbstractThe Pliocene Epoch (∼5.3–2.6 million years ago, Ma) was characterized by a warmer than present climate with smaller Northern Hemisphere ice sheets, and offers an example of a climate system in long‐term equilibrium with current or predicted near‐future atmospheric CO2 concentrations (pCO2). A long‐term trend of ice‐sheet expansion led to more pronounced glacial (cold) stages by the end of the Pliocene (∼2.6 Ma), known as the “intensification of Northern Hemisphere Glaciation” (iNHG). We assessed the spatial and temporal variability of ocean temperatures and ice‐volume indicators through the late Pliocene and early Pleistocene (from 3.3 to 2.4 Ma) to determine the character of this climate transition. We identified asynchronous shifts in long‐term means and the pacing and amplitude of shorter‐term climate variability, between regions and between climate proxies. Early changes in Antarctic glaciation and Southern Hemisphere ocean properties occurred even during the mid‐Piacenzian warm period (∼3.264–3.025 Ma) which has been used as an analog for future warming. Increased climate variability subsequently developed alongside signatures of larger Northern Hemisphere ice sheets (iNHG). Yet, some regions of the ocean felt no impact of iNHG, particularly in lower latitudes. Our analysis has demonstrated the complex, non‐uniform and globally asynchronous nature of climate changes associated with the iNHG. Shifting ocean gateways and ocean circulation changes may have pre‐conditioned the later evolution of ice sheets with falling atmospheric pCO2. Further development of high‐resolution, multi‐proxy reconstructions of climate is required so that the full potential of the rich and detailed geological records can be realized.

Funder

Leverhulme Trust

Royal Society

Universidad de Santiago de Chile

National Science Foundation

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Geophysics

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