4.7 Article

A New Zealand record of sea level rise and environmental change during the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum

Journal

PALAEOGEOGRAPHY PALAEOCLIMATOLOGY PALAEOECOLOGY
Volume 305, Issue 1-4, Pages 185-200

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.palaeo.2011.03.001

Keywords

Carbon isotope; Hydrogen isotope; Plant microfossil assemblage; Palynology; Organic geochemistry

Funding

  1. Royal Society of New Zealand [03-GNS-001]
  2. GNS Science Global Change Through Time Programme (Foundation for Research. Science and Technology) [C05X0701]
  3. NERC

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The global warming associated with the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) ca. 55.5 Myr ago is the most dramatic identified short-term temperature increase of the Cenozoic. One direct consequence of a warming world is a rise in sea level, due primarily to the thermal expansion of water as oceans warmed. The Kumara-2 core, South Island, New Zealand, spans the Paleocene/Eocene transition and provides a rare southern hemisphere continental margin record of the PETM. Lithology, palynology and compound-specific stable isotope compositions of higher plant leaf wax n-alkanes reveal a 4.85 m PETM and a carbon isotope excursion (CIE) of ca. -4.5%., larger than the -2.5 to -3.5%. CIEs generally recorded by deep sea foraminifera. There is a shift from a terrestrial to a marine, potentially anoxic, sedimentary depositional environment at the base of the PETM, interpreted as being the result of a local sea level rise. Coincident with the onset of the CIE is the appearance of pollen associated with thermophilic conditions and the development of Nypa mangrove swamps. Moreover, there is a reorganisation of the angiosperm pollen assemblage during the PETM, and an initial increase in fern spores and decrease in gymnosperms. Crucially, all of these changes occur below the horizon characterised by the most negative delta C-13 values, suggesting that: 1) the recorded negative excursion of 4.5% may indeed reflect the shift in atmospheric CO2 isotopic composition; and 2) that the large input of C-13-depleted carbon into the ocean-atmosphere system was not geologically instantaneous, with at least some of the added carbon lagging warming, sea level rise and vegetation change. Furthermore, compound-specific hydrogen isotope analyses show a large degree of variability both directly before and during the CIE, suggesting that the PETM in New Zealand was characterised by complex and transient changes in the hydrological regime, similar to those reported in North America, the Arctic and Eastern Africa. Thus, the new PETM record from Kumara-2 reveals local climatic and biotic responses, driven by a combination of global warming and the consequential change in local depositional environment induced by sea level rise. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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