4.7 Article

Late Miocene washhouse climate in Europe

Journal

EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
Volume 275, Issue 3-4, Pages 393-401

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.epsl.2008.09.011

Keywords

climate teleconnections; hydrologic cycle; Central American Seaway; Tortonian; Vallesian crisis; continental run-off

Funding

  1. European Science Foundation
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [WI 1828/4, BO 1550/7, 8]

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We present two eight-million year long proxy records of precipitation for Southwest and Central Europe, covering the middle to late Miocene (5.3-13 Ma) at a temporal resolution of about 60 kyr and 150 kyr, respectively. The estimates of precipitation are based on the ecophysiological Structure of herpetological assemblages (amphibians and reptiles). From 13.0 Ma until about 9 Ma, both records show a similar trend, evolving from a long dry period (13-11 Ma) into a washhouse climate (10.2-9.8 Ma), characterized by global warm conditions and several times more precipitation than present. The transition from washhouse to a dryer climate between 9.7 and 9.5 Ma and the concomitant cooling episode appear to have triggered a severe biotic event known as the Vallesian crisis, which included the extinction of hominoids in Western Europe. A second washhouse period (9.0-8.5 Ma), coeval with a global warm episode, was unprecedentedly intense in Southwest Europe, but less pronounced in Central Europe. From 8 Ma onward, a divergence in the two precipitation records is observed, with Southwest Europe staying wetter and Central Europe becoming dryer than present. Both precipitation records are combined into a common run-off curve as a measure of the relative intensity of the hydrological cycle for moderate latitudes of continental Europe. The run-off curve shows a remarkable positive correlation with Atlantic deep-water temperatures from Ceara Rise by Lear et al. (2003), which are significantly higher (up to +3 degrees C) during the two washhouse periods and show no other positive excursion of comparable magnitude. We discuss potential links and the role of the coeval temporary restriction of the Central American Seaway on ocean and atmosphere circulation. (c) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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