Revisiting the Geographical Extent of Exceptional Warmth in the Early Paleogene Southern Ocean

Author:

Frieling J.12ORCID,Bohaty S. M.3ORCID,Cramwinckel M. J.1ORCID,Gallagher S. J.4ORCID,Holdgate G. R.5,Reichgelt T.6ORCID,Peterse F.1ORCID,Pross J.3,Sluijs A.1ORCID,Bijl P. K.1ORCID

Affiliation:

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

2. Now at Department of Earth Sciences University of Oxford Oxford UK

3. Institute of Earth Sciences Heidelberg University Heidelberg Germany

4. School of Geography, Earth and Atmospheric Sciences The University of Melbourne Melbourne VIC Australia

5. Geotrack International Brunswick West VIC Australia

6. Department of Geosciences University of Connecticut Storrs CT USA

Abstract

AbstractTo assess zonal temperature and biogeographical patterns in the Southern Ocean during the Paleogene, we present new multi‐proxy air‐ and sea‐surface temperature data for the latest Paleocene (∼57–56 Ma) and the Paleocene‐Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM; ∼56 Ma) from the northern margin of the Australo‐Antarctic Gulf (AAG). The various proxy data sets document the well‐known late Paleocene warming and, superimposed, two transient late Paleocene pre‐cursor warming events, hundreds of kyr prior to the PETM. Remarkably, temperature reconstructions for the AAG and southwest Pacific during the latest Paleocene, PETM and Early Eocene Climatic Optimum (∼53–49 Ma) show similar trends as well as similar absolute temperatures east and west of the closed Tasmanian Gateway. Our data imply that the exceptional warmth as recorded by previous studies for the southwest Pacific extended westward into the AAG. This contrasts with modeling‐derived circulation and temperature patterns. We suggest that simulations of ocean circulation underestimate heat transport in the southwest Pacific due to insufficient resolution, not allowing for mesoscale eddy‐related heat transport. We argue for a systematic approach to tackle model and proxy biases that may occur in marginal marine settings and non‐analog high‐latitude climates to assess the temperature reconstructions.

Funder

Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek

FP7 Ideas: European Research Council

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Paleontology,Atmospheric Science,Oceanography

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