Premium
Middle Miocene Temperature and Productivity Evolution at a Northeast Atlantic Shelf Site (IODP U1318, Porcupine Basin): Global and Regional Changes
Author(s) -
Sangiorgi Francesca,
Quaijtaal Willemijn,
Donders Timme H.,
Schouten Stefan,
Louwye Stephen
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
paleoceanography and paleoclimatology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.927
H-Index - 127
eISSN - 2572-4525
pISSN - 2572-4517
DOI - 10.1029/2020pa004059
Subject(s) - geology , oceanography , sea surface temperature , benthic zone , climate change , dinocyst , holocene climatic optimum , structural basin , productivity , arctic , plateau (mathematics) , palynology , climatology , paleontology , pollen , ecology , mathematical analysis , mathematics , macroeconomics , economics , biology
We present a high‐resolution multiproxy middle Miocene sea surface temperature (SST) and productivity (SSP) reconstruction of Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Site U1318, from the upper slope edge (∼400 m water depth) of the Porcupine Basin continental margin, eastern North Atlantic Ocean. Biomarker and dinoflagellate cyst proxies reveal warm and mostly stratified waters during the Miocene Climatic Optimum (MCO) that cooled ∼3°C across the Miocene Climate Transition (MCT). The organic biomarker (TEX 86 andU K ′ 37 ) paleothermometers document a series of 11 transient cooling events (CEs), superimposed on the long‐term climate evolution. These CEs are associated with increases in cold‐water dinocysts and correlate to global benthic δ 18 O shifts, including the Mi‐2, Mi‐3, and Mi‐4 events. Most CEs are also associated with increases in primary productivity. A prolonged interval of high SSP between ∼13.8 and 13.6 Ma supports the idea that carbon production (and burial) in shallow areas represents a feedback mechanism contributing to long‐term atmospheric CO 2 decline and cooling during the MCT. SST comparison in three North Atlantic sites (Azores Site 608, Porcupine Basin Site U1318, and Rockall Plateau Site 982) reveals that MCO SSTs are much warmer at Site 608 than at the other two sites. The low‐resolution SST record of Site 982 shows no decrease in temperature around the MCT. This may be linked to contemporaneous tectonic changes in the Tethys, Central American, and Arctic Seaways impacting local ocean circulation, superimposed on global drivers of climate change.