Compartir
Título
Circum-antarctic warming events between 4 and 3.5Ma recorded in marine sediments from the Prydz Bay (ODP Leg 188) and the Antarctic Peninsula (ODP Leg 178) margins
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Early-middle Pliocene
Glaciomarine sedimentation
Antarctic Peninsula
Prydz Bay
Circum-Antarctic
Glacial-interglacial cycles
Clasificación UNESCO
2506 Geología
2502.05 Paleoclimatología
Fecha de publicación
2009
Editor
Elsevier
Citación
Escutia, C., Bárcena, M. A., Lucchi, R. G., Romero, O., Ballegeer, A. M., Gonzalez, J. J., & Harwood, D. M. (2009). Circum-antarctic warming events between 4 and 3.5 Ma recorded in marine sediments from the Prydz Bay (ODP Leg 188) and the Antarctic Peninsula (ODP Leg 178) margins. Global and Planetary Change, 69(3), 170-184. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2009.09.003
Resumen
[EN] Our study characterizes glacial and interglacial deposition on two Antarctic margins in order to discriminate
between regional and continent-wide early to middle Pliocene warm intervals that caused sea-ice reduction
and continental ice sheet retreat. We use a multi-proxy (i.e., sediment facies and grain size, siliceous
microfossils, biogenic opal, geochemical composition and clay mineralogy) approach to examine sediments
recovered in drill holes from the West Antarctic Peninsula and the East Antarctic Prydz Bay margins, focusing
on the climatic record between 4 and 3.5 Ma.
Warm conditions in both East and West Antarctica are recorded, which based on our age model correspond
to periods of prolonged or extreme warmth correlated with isotopic stages Gi5, Gi1, MG11 and MG7. For the
Gi5 interglacial our data corroborates the 60% Dictyocha percentage at 34.60 mbsf previously reported from
Prydz Bay and interpreted to indicate a SSST of about 5.6 °C above present. Our higher-resolution sampling
interval shows Dictyocha percentages up to 87.5%, suggesting even higher SSSTs above present levels. During
MG11, which coincides with the section dated by the magnetic polarity reversal Gilbert-Gauss at 3.58 Ma,
SSSTs were tentatively 2.5°–4° warmer than present, and reduced sea-ice cover in Prydz Bay and probably
also west of the Antarctic Peninsula is indicated by increased primary productivity. In addition, a reduction
of ice sheet size is suggested by the bioturbated and IRD-enriched facies that characterize these highproductivity intervals. Based in our age model and calculated sedimentation rates glacial–interglacial
cyclicity between 4 and 3.5 Ma in the cores from Antarctic Peninsula and Prydz Bay Sites, result in
frequencies consistent with obliquity and precession forcing.
The prolonged early-middle Pliocene warm period was superimposed on a cooling trend recorded by the:
1) increase of the terrigenous sediment supply at all our sites starting between 3.7 and 3.6 Ma, and
2) decrease in SSSTs (from >5.6 °C at 3.7 Ma to 4°–2.7 °C at 3.6 Ma, and 2.5 °C at 3.5 Ma.) indicated by the
silicoflagellate W/C R from Site 1165. We postulate that, although the start of a cooling trend is recorded at
about 3.7–3.6-Ma, relatively warm conditions prevailed until 3.5 Ma capable of maintained open marine
conditions with reduced or no sea-ice and reduced ice sheet volume and extent.
The information in this paper regarding the timing of continental-wide and regional warm events and the
paleoenvironmental conditions that characterized them (i.e., SSST, extent of sea ice, and ice sheet size) are
relevant to help constrain paleoclimate and ice sheet models for the early-middle Pliocene, a time period
when the level of warming according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change 2007 report, is
within range of the estimates of the Earth's global temperature increases for the 21st century. These data,
when linked to modeling studies like those of Pollard and DeConto (2009) will further our understanding of
how these ice sheets may respond to future warming of the southern high latitudes.
Descripción
Artículo científico
URI
ISSN
0921-8181
DOI
10.1016/j.gloplacha.2009.09.003
Versión del editor
Aparece en las colecciones
Ficheros en el ítem
Nombre:
Tamaño:
1.510Mb
Formato:
Adobe PDF
Descripción:
Articulo prinicipal













