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Late Pliocene equatorial Pacific
Author(s) -
MedinaElizalde Martín,
Lea David W.
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
paleoceanography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1944-9186
pISSN - 0883-8305
DOI - 10.1029/2009pa001780
Subject(s) - geology , climatology , sea surface temperature , northern hemisphere , orbital forcing , walker circulation , interglacial , glacial period , δ18o , oceanography , paleoclimatology , pleistocene , global cooling , climate change , paleontology , stable isotope ratio , physics , quantum mechanics
Late Pliocene foraminiferal Mg/Ca and δ 18 O records from Ocean Drilling Program Hole 806B in the western equatorial Pacific (WEP) reveal warm pool climate evolution during the onset of Northern Hemisphere glaciation, 3.1–2.3 Myr B.P. Mg/Ca data indicate an average late Pliocene sea surface temperature (SST) of 27.8°C, a small long‐term cooling of 0.3°C between 3.1 and 2.3 Ma, and a glacial‐interglacial (G‐I) SST range of 2°C throughout this time interval. For comparison, Pleistocene SSTs at this site over the last 0.9 Myr average 27.7°C with a G‐I range of 3°C. Orbital‐scale variability in Hole 806B SSTs during the late Pliocene occurs predominantly at ∼100 ka, in contrast to foraminiferal δ 18 O records, which show a dominant 41 kyr period. Variability at a 41 kyr period, out of phase with local annual insolation changes driven by obliquity, is also observed in the new WEP SST record. The WEP SST record suggests that an ∼3°C equatorial Pacific SST zonal gradient prevailed during the late Pliocene, compatible with a weaker Walker circulation. Adjustment of Hole 806B SSTs for past changes in seawater Mg/Ca suggests that SSTs higher than 30°C prevailed at 3 Myr B.P., followed by a progressive cooling of the warm pool through the late Pliocene. The characteristics of late Pliocene tropical climate evolution suggest that atmospheric greenhouse gas forcing played a major role in driving the observed G‐I SST changes.

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