4.7 Article

CO2 and tectonic controls on Antarctic climate and ice-sheet evolution in the mid-Miocene

Journal

EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
Volume 564, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.epsl.2021.116908

Keywords

Miocene; Antarctic ice sheet; ice sheet model; climate model; Transantarctic Mountain uplift

Funding

  1. US National Science Foundation [ICER 1664013]
  2. US Antarctic Program
  3. New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment through the Past Antarctic Science Programme [C05X1001]
  4. Antarctic Science Platform [ANTA1801]
  5. Victoria University of Wellington PhD scholarship
  6. Royal Society [URF\R1\180317]
  7. Antarctica New Zealand
  8. [NSF-1638954]

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Research on Antarctic ice sheet and climate evolution during the mid-Miocene has revealed dynamic responses to past climatic variations and identified significant impacts of high CO2 concentrations on ice sheet dynamics. Model simulations combined with geological records provide insights into the Earth's history during a pivotal period.
Antarctic ice sheet and climate evolution during the mid-Miocene has direct relevance for understanding ice sheet (in)stability and the long-term response to elevated atmospheric CO2 in the future. Geologic records reconstruct major fluctuations in the volume and extent of marine and terrestrial ice during the mid-Miocene, revealing a dynamic Antarctic ice-sheet response to past climatic variations. We use an ensemble of climate - ice sheet - vegetation model simulations spanning a range of CO2 concentrations, Transantarctic Mountain uplift scenarios, and glacial/interglacial climatic conditions to identify climate and ice-sheet conditions consistent with Antarctic mid-Miocene terrestrial and marine geological records. We explore climatic variability at both continental and regional scales, focusing specifically on Victoria Land and Wilkes Land Basin regions using a high-resolution nested climate model over these domains. We find that peak warmth during the Miocene Climate Optimum is characterized by a thick terrestrial ice sheet receded from the coastline under high CO2 concentrations. During the Middle Miocene Climate Transition, CO2 episodically dropped below a threshold value for marine-based ice expansion. Comparison of model results with geologic data support ongoing Transantarctic Mountain uplift throughout the mid-Miocene. Modeled ice sheet dynamics over the Wilkes Land Basin were highly sensitive to CO2 concentrations. This work provides a continental-wide context for localized geologic paleoclimate and vegetation records, integrating multiple datasets to reconstruct snapshots of ice sheet and climatic conditions during a pivotal period in Earth's history. (C) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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