Eocene‐Oligocene Intensification of the Deep Western Boundary Current in the North Atlantic Ocean

Author:

Parent Andrew M.12,Chilton Kristin D.34ORCID,van Peer Tim E.567,Bohaty Steven M.58ORCID,Spray James F.59ORCID,Scher Howie D.10,Wilson Paul A.5ORCID,Romans Brian W.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geosciences Virginia Tech Blacksburg VA USA

2. Now at Shell U.S.A. Houston TX USA

3. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering Virginia Tech Blacksburg VA USA

4. Department of Geology and Geography West Virginia University Morgantown WV USA

5. University of Southampton Waterfront Campus National Oceanography Centre Southampton Southampton UK

6. Department of Earth Sciences University College London London UK

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

8. Now at Institute of Earth Sciences Heidelberg University Heidelberg Germany

9. Now at School of Math and Science The Community College of Baltimore County Baltimore MD USA

10. Department of Earth, Ocean, and Environment University of South Carolina Columbia SC USA

Abstract

AbstractThe role played by ocean circulation in major transitions in Earth's climate is debated. Here, we investigate the physical evolution of the Deep Western Boundary Current (DWBC) in the western North Atlantic Ocean through the late Eocene‐to‐mid Oligocene (35−26 Ma) using terrigenous grain size and geochemistry records of marine sediment cores. Our records cover the most pivotal transition in Cenozoic climate history, the Eocene‐Oligocene Transition (EOT; ∼33.7 Ma), when Earth first became sufficiently cool to sustain large ice sheets on Antarctica. To assess changes in deep‐water circulation in the northwest Atlantic across the EOT, we assembled sortable silt (10–63 μm) grain‐size and Nd, Hf, and Pb radiogenic isotope records at two Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) drill sites on the Newfoundland ridges (Sites U1406 and U1411). These records reveal an overall gradual increase in sortable silt abundance (SS%) at both sites with no change in sediment provenance. We interpret a steady, long‐term invigoration of the DWBC, likely driven by deepening of the Greenland‐Scotland Ridge and resultant enhanced inflow of waters sourced from deep‐water production sites in the Nordic Seas to the North Atlantic Ocean. Our results do not support abrupt and widespread invigoration of bottom current activity in the North Atlantic synchronous with accelerated cooling and Antarctic ice growth at the EOT. Instead, our records suggest that the DWBC started to intensify before this pivotal event in Cenozoic climate history (at ∼35 Ma) and then further strengthened gradually across the EOT (∼34 Ma) and through the early‐to‐mid Oligocene (∼34‒26 Ma).

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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