期刊
PALEOCEANOGRAPHY
卷 26, 期 -, 页码 -出版社
AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2010PA002037
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资金
- NERC
- Magdalene College
- UCLA Division of Physical Sciences
The presence of glacial ice in the late middle Eocene has been vigorously debated. Recently published sedimentary data from the high latitudes is suggestive of episodic cooling events and near-freezing sea surface temperatures during parts of the late middle Eocene. Constraints on ice volumes and the significance of excursions in open ocean foraminifera and seawater delta O-18 reconstructions are less clear, and there are few high-resolution delta O-18 records. We present a new detailed record of benthic foraminiferal delta O-18 from Site 1209 that exhibits variations (Delta delta O-18(benthic)) of 0.6 parts per thousand-1.3 parts per thousand. Different approaches have previously been used to interpret Delta delta O-18(benthic), including (1) an a priori assumption of a 50% contribution of temperature, similar to what is reconstructed for the Last Glacial Maximum-recent change; (2) applying Oligocene calibrations between apparent sea level (ASL) and Delta delta O-18(benthic); or (3) assuming temperature and seawater delta O-18 contributions can be partitioned through comparison with benthic Mg/Ca. Using assumption 1, the record from Site 1209 indicates changes in seawater delta O-18 of 0.3 parts per thousand-0.7 parts per thousand, equivalent to similar to 33-72 m (m) of ASL (assuming mean ice delta O-18 of similar to-45 parts per thousand). Using assumption 2 and two different end-member calibrations, the delta O-18(benthic) record implies changes in ASL of 23-50 m or 50-108 m. The third approach yields changes in seawater delta O-18 of up to 0.6 parts per thousand to 1.4 parts per thousand. We explore the compatibility of the results of each of these approaches with other studies that discuss evidence for ephemeral glaciations during the middle Eocene with variable ice storage at one or both poles.
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