Transient Shoaling, Over‐Deepening and Settling of the Calcite Compensation Depth at the Eocene‐Oligocene Transition

Author:

Taylor V. E.12ORCID,Westerhold T.3ORCID,Bohaty S. M.14ORCID,Backman J.5,Dunkley Jones T.6ORCID,Edgar K. M.17ORCID,Egan K. E.18,Lyle M.9,Pälike H.3,Röhl U.3ORCID,Zachos J.10,Wilson P. A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Ocean and Earth Science Waterfront Campus National Oceanography Centre University of Southampton Southampton UK

2. Now at Department of Earth Sciences University of Bergen, and Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research Bergen Norway

3. MARUM – Center for Marine Environmental Sciences University of Bremen Bremen Germany

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

5. Department of Geological Sciences Stockholm University Stockholm Sweden

6. School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences University of Birmingham Birmingham UK

7. Now at School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences University of Birmingham Birmingham UK

8. Now at Flood Forecasting Centre Met Office Exeter UK

9. College of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Science Oregon State University Corvallis OR USA

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

Abstract

AbstractThe major Cenozoic shift from a shallow (∼3–4 km) to deep (∼4.5 km) calcite compensation depth (CCD) occurred at the Eocene‐Oligocene Transition (∼34 Ma), suggesting a strong relationship between calcium carbonate (CaCO3) cycling and Antarctic glaciation. However, the linkages between these two events are debated. Here we present new records of bulk sediment stable isotope and carbonate composition from a depth transect of sites in the low‐latitude Pacific Ocean and one site from the South Atlantic Ocean, together with a new benthic foraminiferal stable isotope record (δ13Cb and δ18Ob) from the Pacific where the sedimentary sequence is most expanded. Our records reveal a short‐lived (∼300 Kyr) CCD shoaling event closely associated with a negative carbon isotope excursion in the latest Eocene. This event is immediately followed by CCD deepening which occurs in two rapid (∼40 Kyr‐long) steps. Our data show that the first of these deepening steps represents recovery from the latest Eocene shoaling event while the second was closely associated with a rapid increase in δ18Ob and shows a distinctive over‐deepening and settling pattern to >5 and 4.4 km, respectively. These results, together with good agreement between Pacific and South Atlantic records, strongly suggest that the carbon cycle was perturbed globally shortly before the inception of Antarctic glaciation. Once large‐scale Antarctic glaciation was initiated, rapid further change in global seawater chemistry triggered transitory deep ocean carbonate burial fluxes far exceeding their early Oligocene steady state values.

Funder

Natural Environment Research Council

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Paleontology,Atmospheric Science,Oceanography

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