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Phanerozoic paleotemperatures: The earth's changing climate during the last 540 million years

Journal

EARTH-SCIENCE REVIEWS
Volume 215, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.earscirev.2021.103503

Keywords

paleoclimate; paleotemperature; Phanerozoic; climate change; climate history; ice age; icehouse; hothouse; Hirnantian Ice Age; Permo-Carboniferous Ice Age; End Triassic Extinction; K/T Extinction; K/T Impact Winter; PETM; Pleistocene Ice Age; Future Global Warming; partial derivative O-18; partial derivative C-13

Funding

  1. PALEOMAP Project
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41821001]
  3. UK Natural Environment Research Council [NE/S009663/1]
  4. NERC [NE/S009663/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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This study provides a comprehensive and quantitative estimate of global temperature changes over the past 540 million years, combining various paleoclimate indicators. The global temperature model includes estimates of global average temperature, tropical temperatures, deep ocean temperatures, and polar temperatures. The history of global temperature changes has been summarized into 8 major climate modes, each consisting of warming and cooling episodes influenced by geological processes.
This study provides a comprehensive and quantitative estimate of how global temperatures have changed during the last 540 million years. It combines paleotemperature measurements determined from oxygen isotopes with broader insights obtained from the changing distribution of lithologic indicators of climate, such as coals, evaporites, calcretes, reefs, and bauxite deposits. The waxing and waning of the Earth's great polar icecaps have been mapped using the past distribution of tillites, dropstones, and glendonites. The global temperature model presented here includes estimates of global average temperate (GAT), changing tropical temperatures (Delta T degrees tropical), deep ocean temperatures, and polar temperatures. Though similar, in many respects, to the temperature history deduced directly from the study of oxygen isotopes, our model does not predict the extreme high temperatures for the Early Paleozoic required by isotopic investigations. The history of global changes in temperature during the Phanerozoic has been summarized in a paleotemperature timescale that subdivides the many past climatic events into 8 major climate modes; each climate mode is made up of 3-4 pairs of warming and cooling episodes (chmnotemps). A detailed narrative describes how these past temperature events have been affected by geological processes such as the eruption of Large Igneous Provinces (LIPS) (warming) and bolide impacts (cooling). The paleotemperature model presented here allows for a deeper understanding of the interconnected geologic, tectonic, paleoclimatic, paleoceanographic, and evolutionary events that have shaped our planet, and we make explicit predictions about the Earth's past temperature that can be tested and evaluated. By quantitatively describing the pattern of paleotemperature change through time, we may be able to gain important insights into the history of the Earth System and the fundamental causes of climate change on geological timescales. These insights can help us better understand the problems and challenges that we face as a result of Future Global Warming.

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