4.5 Article

EARLY CENOZOIC EVOLUTION OF TOPOGRAPHY, CLIMATE, AND STABLE ISOTOPES IN PRECIPITATION IN THE NORTH AMERICAN CORDILLERA

期刊

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SCIENCE
卷 313, 期 7, 页码 613-648

出版社

AMER JOURNAL SCIENCE
DOI: 10.2475/07.2013.01

关键词

Eocene; paleoaltimetry; North American Cordillera; paleoclimate; paleoclimate modeling; oxygen isotopes; precipitation

资金

  1. NSF [EAR-1019420]
  2. Directorate For Geosciences
  3. Division Of Earth Sciences [1019648] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Paleoelevation reconstructions of the North American Cordillera the inferred from the oxygen (delta O-18) and hydrogen (delta D) isotope ratios of terrestrial paleoclimate proxy materials (soils, ashes, lake sediments) suggest rapid north-to-south migration of topography in the early Cenozoic (pre-49 Ma to 28 Ma). The validation of this reconstruction relies on an accurate understanding of the delta O-18(p) and the associated regional climate change in response to the uplift of the western North America. Here we study this response using a global climate model (GCM) with explicit delta O-18(p) diagnostics (ECHAM5-wiso) focusing on the isotopic effects of different types of precipitation, vapor mixing, recycling and moisture source and compare the response against estimates made using a Rayleigh distillation models of moist adiabatic condensation (RDM). Four experiments are performed with Eocene topography inferred from terrestrial stable isotope paleoaltimetry records to investigate how southward propagation of topography affects regional climate (temperature, precipitation and circulation pattern) and delta O-18(p) over North America. Our experiments predict delta O-18 patterns that are broadly consistent with maps of temporally binned proxy delta O-18 and generally support an early Cenozoic north-to-south propagation of high topography in the North American Cordillera. They do not support the commonly made assumption that isotopic fractionation occurs primarily through rainout following Rayleigh distillation nor the application of modern empirical delta O-18(p) lapse rates to past environments. In our GCM simulations, precipitation processes and climate changes that are not captured by RDMs substantially affect delta O-18(p). These processes include shifts in local precipitation type between convective and large-scale rain and between rain and snow; intensification of low-level vapor recycling particularly on leeward slopes; development of air mass mixing and changes in wind direction and moisture source. Each of these processes can have significant (>= 2 parts per thousand) influences on delta O-18(p) that are comparable in magnitude to surface uplift of hundreds or even thousands of meters. In many regions, these processes fortuitously compensate each other, explaining the apparent agreement between ECHAM5-wiso and proxy delta O-18 and, more broadly, between RDM estimates and observed delta O-18-elevation relationships. In some regions, compensation is incomplete, and as a result, ECHAM5-wiso delta O-18(p) does not agree with estimates from the RDM. In these regions, including the interior of the northern cordillera and the eastern flank of the southern Cordillera, moderate adjustments of paleoelevations may be in order.

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