dc.description.abstract | Multimillion-year proxy records across the Paleocene and Eocene show prominent variations
on orbital time scales. The cycles, which have been identified at various sites across the globe, preferentially
concentrate spectral power at eccentricity and precessional frequencies. It is evident that these cycles are
an expression of changes in global climate and carbon cycling paced by astronomical forcing. However,
little is currently known about the link between orbital forcing and the carbon cycle-climate system and the
amplitude of associated atmospheric CO2 variations. Here we use simple and complex carbon cycle models
to explore the basic effect of different orbital forcing schemes and noise on the carbon cycle. Our primary
modeling target is the high-resolution, ∼7.7 Myr long, benthic isotope record at Ocean Drilling Program Site
1262 in the South Atlantic. For direct insolation forcing (as opposed to artificial eccentricity-tilt-precession),
one major challenge is understanding how the system transfers spectral power from high to low
frequencies. We discuss feasible solutions, including insolation transformations analogous to electronic
AC-DC conversion (DC’ing). Regarding mechanisms, we focus on tropical insolation and a long-term carbon
imbalance in terrestrial organic burial/oxidation but do not rule out other scenarios. Our analysis shows that
high-latitude mechanisms are unlikely drivers of orbitally paced changes in the late Paleocene-early Eocene
(LPEE) Earth system. Furthermore, we provide constraints on the origin and isotopic composition of a
possible LPEE cyclic carbon imbalance/source responding to astronomical forcing. Our simulations also
reveal a mechanism for the large 𝛿13C-eccentricity lag at the 400 kyr period observed in Paleocene,
Oligocene, and Miocene sections. We present the first estimates of orbital-scale variations in atmospheric
CO2 during the late Paleocene and early Eocene | en_GB |