Latitudinal variance in the drivers and pacing of warmth during mid-Pleistocene MIS 31 in the Antarctic Zone of the Southern Ocean
Warnock, JP; Reilly, BT; Raymo, ME; et al.Weber, ME; Peck, V; Williams, T; Armbrecht, L; Bailey, I; Brachfeld, S; Du, Z; Fauth, G; Garcia, MM; Glueder, A; Guitard, M; Gutjahr, M; Hemming, S; Hernández-Almeida, I; Hoem, FS; Hwang, J-H; Iizuka, M; Kato, Y; Lee, B; Martos, YM; O’Connell, S; Pérez, LF; Ronge, TA; Seki, O; Tauxe, L; Tripathi, S; Zheng, X; Stoner, J; Scherer, RP
Date: 5 August 2022
Article
Journal
Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology
Publisher
Wiley / American Geophysical Union
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Early Pleistocene Marine Isotope Stage (MIS)-31 (1.081 to 1.062 Ma) is a unique interval of extreme global warming, including evidence of a West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) collapse. Here we present a new 1000-year resolution, spanning 1.110-1.030 Ma, diatom-based reconstruction of primary productivity, relative sea surface temperature ...
Early Pleistocene Marine Isotope Stage (MIS)-31 (1.081 to 1.062 Ma) is a unique interval of extreme global warming, including evidence of a West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) collapse. Here we present a new 1000-year resolution, spanning 1.110-1.030 Ma, diatom-based reconstruction of primary productivity, relative sea surface temperature changes, sea-ice proximity/open ocean conditions and diatom species absolute abundances during MIS-31, from the Scotia Sea (59° S) using deep-sea sediments collected during International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Expedition 382. The lower Jaramillo magnetic reversal (base of C1r.1n, 1.071 Ma) provides a robust and independent time-stratigraphic marker to correlate records from other drill cores in the Antarctic Zone of the Southern Ocean (AZSO). An increase in open ocean species Fragilariopsis kerguelensis in early MIS-31 at 53° S (Ocean Drilling Program Site 1094) correlates with increased obliquity forcing, whereas at 59° S (IODP Site U1537; this study) three progressively increasing, successive peaks in the relative abundance of F. kerguelensis correlate with Southern Hemisphere-phased precession pacing. These observations reveal a complex pattern of ocean temperature change and sustained sea surface temperature increase lasting longer than a precession cycle within the Atlantic sector of the AZSO. Timing of an inferred WAIS collapse is consistent with delayed warmth (possibly driven by sea-ice dynamics) in the southern AZSO, supporting models that indicate WAIS sensitivity to local sub-ice shelf melting. Anthropogenically enhanced impingement of relatively warm water beneath the ice shelves today highlights the importance of understanding dynamic responses of the WAIS during MIS-31, a warmer than Holocene interglacial.
Camborne School of Mines
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