scholarly journals Cenozoic Antarctic climate evolution based on molecular and isotopic biomarker reconstructions from geological archives in the Ross Sea region

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Bella Duncan

<p>During the Cenozoic Era (the last 65 Ma), Antarctica’s climate has evolved from ice free conditions of the ‘Greenhouse world’, which at its peak (~ 55 Ma) supported near-tropical forests, to the ‘Icehouse’ climate of today with permanent ice sheets, and a very sparse macroflora. This long-term cooling trend is punctuated by a number of major, abrupt, and in some cases, irreversible climate transitions. Reconstructing past changes in vegetation, sea surface temperature, hydroclimate and the carbon cycle require robust geological proxies that in turn can provide insights into climatic thresholds and feedbacks that drove major transitions in the evolution of Antarctica’s ice sheets. Biomarkers allow climate and environmental proxy reconstructions for this region, where other more traditional paleoclimate methods are less suitable. This study has two aims. Firstly to assess the suitability and applicability of biomarkers in Antarctic sediments across a range of depositional settings and ages, and secondly to apply biomarker-based climate proxies to reconstruct environmental and climate conditions during key periods in the development of the Antarctic Ice Sheets.  The distribution and abundances of n-alkanes are assessed in Oligocene and Miocene sediments from a terrestrial outcrop locality in the Transantarctic Mountains, and two glaciomarine sediment cores and an ice-distal deep marine core from the western Ross Sea. Comparisons are made with n-alkane distributions in Eocene glacial erratics and sedimentary rocks of the Mesozoic Beacon Supergroup, both likely sources of reworked material. A shift in dominant chain length from n-C₂₉ to n-C₂₇ occurs between the Late Eocene and Early Oligocene, considered a response to a significant climate cooling. Samples from glaciofluvial environments onshore, and subglacial and ice-proximal environments offshore display a reworked n-alkane distribution, characterised by low carbon preference index (CPI), high average chain length (ACL) and high n-C₂₉/n-C₂₇ values. Whereas, samples from lower-energy, more benign lacustrine and ice-distal marine environments predominantly contained contemporary material.  Palynomorphs and biomarker proxies based on n-alkanes and glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraethers (GDGTs) are applied to a Late Oligocene and Early Miocene glaciomarine succession spanning the large transient excursion of the Mi-1 glaciation (~23 Ma) in DSDP Site 270 drill core from the central Ross Sea. While the Late Oligocene is marked by relatively warm conditions, regional cooling initiated a transition into Mi-1. This was likely driven by a combination of decreasing atmospheric CO₂ and an orbital geometry favouring low seasonality and cool summers, leading to an intensification of proto-Antarctic bottom water production as the Ross Sea deepened and cooled. Mi-1 manifests as a regionally cool period, with minimum subsurface temperatures of ~4°C and onshore mean summer temperatures of ~8°C. A negative n-alkane δ¹³C excursion of up to 4.8‰ is interpreted as a vegetation response to cold, restricted growing seasons, with plants driven to lower altitudes and more stunted growth forms. However, ocean temperatures remained too warm for marine-based ice sheets to advance onto the outer continental shelf and over-ride the drill site. The large increase in ice volume associated with this event, implied by global δ¹⁸O records, was probably held on a higher, terrestrial West Antarctica of greater extent than present day. The relative lack of ice rafted debris during Mi-1, suggests the presence of a marginal marine-terminating ice sheet with fringing ice shelves to the south of DSDP site 270, calving icebergs lacking a basal debris layer, similar to those calving from the Ross Ice Shelf today. This extensive ice cover may explain a large decrease in marine n-alkanes at this time restricting marine productivity on the continental shelf. The biomarker data for the Early Miocene in DSDP 270 indicates a relative warming in both terrestrial and marine temperatures following the transient Mi-1 glacial expansion, but an overall baseline cooling of climate between Late Oligocene and the Early Miocene in the Ross Sea embayment.  Isoprenoid GDGTs are used to reconstruct a Cenozoic subsurface ocean temperature compilation for the Ross Sea, a key source region of ocean deep water. The ocean temperature TEXL86 calibration and BAYSPAR in standard subsurface mode were considered, through comparison with independent microfossil and sedimentological data, the most appropriate for use in this region. Ocean temperatures cool prior to the Eocene/Oligocene transition and remain cool for the rest of the Cenozoic, with the exception of short periods of relative warmth in the Late Oligocene and Mid-Miocene Climate Optimum, and long-term trends broadly mirror that of the foraminiferal δ¹⁸O record from the deep Pacific. The Δ Ring Index is used to assess non-thermal influences on GDGT distributions, and displays a long term shift from more positive to more negative deviations. This correlates with %GDGT-0, and also relates to a declining trend in the Methane Index, which reflect the contribution of methanogenic and methanotrophic archaea. These changes suggest that these archaea contributed more to the archaeal community in the early to mid Cenozoic, potentially indicating a more anoxic depositional environment in the Ross Sea. The Branched to Isoprenoid Tetraether index (BIT) steadily declines over the Cenozoic, reflecting increasingly hyper-arid conditions onshore, with less active glaciofluvial systems, limited soil development and less ice-free land.</p>

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Bella Duncan

<p>During the Cenozoic Era (the last 65 Ma), Antarctica’s climate has evolved from ice free conditions of the ‘Greenhouse world’, which at its peak (~ 55 Ma) supported near-tropical forests, to the ‘Icehouse’ climate of today with permanent ice sheets, and a very sparse macroflora. This long-term cooling trend is punctuated by a number of major, abrupt, and in some cases, irreversible climate transitions. Reconstructing past changes in vegetation, sea surface temperature, hydroclimate and the carbon cycle require robust geological proxies that in turn can provide insights into climatic thresholds and feedbacks that drove major transitions in the evolution of Antarctica’s ice sheets. Biomarkers allow climate and environmental proxy reconstructions for this region, where other more traditional paleoclimate methods are less suitable. This study has two aims. Firstly to assess the suitability and applicability of biomarkers in Antarctic sediments across a range of depositional settings and ages, and secondly to apply biomarker-based climate proxies to reconstruct environmental and climate conditions during key periods in the development of the Antarctic Ice Sheets.  The distribution and abundances of n-alkanes are assessed in Oligocene and Miocene sediments from a terrestrial outcrop locality in the Transantarctic Mountains, and two glaciomarine sediment cores and an ice-distal deep marine core from the western Ross Sea. Comparisons are made with n-alkane distributions in Eocene glacial erratics and sedimentary rocks of the Mesozoic Beacon Supergroup, both likely sources of reworked material. A shift in dominant chain length from n-C₂₉ to n-C₂₇ occurs between the Late Eocene and Early Oligocene, considered a response to a significant climate cooling. Samples from glaciofluvial environments onshore, and subglacial and ice-proximal environments offshore display a reworked n-alkane distribution, characterised by low carbon preference index (CPI), high average chain length (ACL) and high n-C₂₉/n-C₂₇ values. Whereas, samples from lower-energy, more benign lacustrine and ice-distal marine environments predominantly contained contemporary material.  Palynomorphs and biomarker proxies based on n-alkanes and glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraethers (GDGTs) are applied to a Late Oligocene and Early Miocene glaciomarine succession spanning the large transient excursion of the Mi-1 glaciation (~23 Ma) in DSDP Site 270 drill core from the central Ross Sea. While the Late Oligocene is marked by relatively warm conditions, regional cooling initiated a transition into Mi-1. This was likely driven by a combination of decreasing atmospheric CO₂ and an orbital geometry favouring low seasonality and cool summers, leading to an intensification of proto-Antarctic bottom water production as the Ross Sea deepened and cooled. Mi-1 manifests as a regionally cool period, with minimum subsurface temperatures of ~4°C and onshore mean summer temperatures of ~8°C. A negative n-alkane δ¹³C excursion of up to 4.8‰ is interpreted as a vegetation response to cold, restricted growing seasons, with plants driven to lower altitudes and more stunted growth forms. However, ocean temperatures remained too warm for marine-based ice sheets to advance onto the outer continental shelf and over-ride the drill site. The large increase in ice volume associated with this event, implied by global δ¹⁸O records, was probably held on a higher, terrestrial West Antarctica of greater extent than present day. The relative lack of ice rafted debris during Mi-1, suggests the presence of a marginal marine-terminating ice sheet with fringing ice shelves to the south of DSDP site 270, calving icebergs lacking a basal debris layer, similar to those calving from the Ross Ice Shelf today. This extensive ice cover may explain a large decrease in marine n-alkanes at this time restricting marine productivity on the continental shelf. The biomarker data for the Early Miocene in DSDP 270 indicates a relative warming in both terrestrial and marine temperatures following the transient Mi-1 glacial expansion, but an overall baseline cooling of climate between Late Oligocene and the Early Miocene in the Ross Sea embayment.  Isoprenoid GDGTs are used to reconstruct a Cenozoic subsurface ocean temperature compilation for the Ross Sea, a key source region of ocean deep water. The ocean temperature TEXL86 calibration and BAYSPAR in standard subsurface mode were considered, through comparison with independent microfossil and sedimentological data, the most appropriate for use in this region. Ocean temperatures cool prior to the Eocene/Oligocene transition and remain cool for the rest of the Cenozoic, with the exception of short periods of relative warmth in the Late Oligocene and Mid-Miocene Climate Optimum, and long-term trends broadly mirror that of the foraminiferal δ¹⁸O record from the deep Pacific. The Δ Ring Index is used to assess non-thermal influences on GDGT distributions, and displays a long term shift from more positive to more negative deviations. This correlates with %GDGT-0, and also relates to a declining trend in the Methane Index, which reflect the contribution of methanogenic and methanotrophic archaea. These changes suggest that these archaea contributed more to the archaeal community in the early to mid Cenozoic, potentially indicating a more anoxic depositional environment in the Ross Sea. The Branched to Isoprenoid Tetraether index (BIT) steadily declines over the Cenozoic, reflecting increasingly hyper-arid conditions onshore, with less active glaciofluvial systems, limited soil development and less ice-free land.</p>


2019 ◽  
Vol 178 ◽  
pp. 46-64 ◽  
Author(s):  
Denise K. Kulhanek ◽  
Richard H. Levy ◽  
Christopher D. Clowes ◽  
Joseph G. Prebble ◽  
Daniel Rodelli ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Lara F. Pérez ◽  
Laura De Santis ◽  
Robert M. McKay ◽  
Robert D. Larter ◽  
Jeanine Ash ◽  
...  

Oscillations in ice sheet extent during early and middle Miocene are intermittently preserved in the sedimentary record from the Antarctic continental shelf, with widespread erosion occurring during major ice sheet advances, and open marine deposition during times of ice sheet retreat. Data from seismic reflection surveys and drill sites from Deep Sea Drilling Project Leg 28 and International Ocean Discovery Program Expedition 374, located across the present-day middle continental shelf of the central Ross Sea (Antarctica), indicate the presence of expanded early to middle Miocene sedimentary sections. These include the Miocene climate optimum (MCO ca. 17−14.6 Ma) and the middle Miocene climate transition (MMCT ca. 14.6−13.9 Ma). Here, we correlate drill core records, wireline logs and reflection seismic data to elucidate the depositional architecture of the continental shelf and reconstruct the evolution and variability of dynamic ice sheets in the Ross Sea during the Miocene. Drill-site data are used to constrain seismic isopach maps that document the evolution of different ice sheets and ice caps which influenced sedimentary processes in the Ross Sea through the early to middle Miocene. In the early Miocene, periods of localized advance of the ice margin are revealed by the formation of thick sediment wedges prograding into the basins. At this time, morainal bank complexes are distinguished along the basin margins suggesting sediment supply derived from marine-terminating glaciers. During the MCO, biosiliceous-bearing sediments are regionally mapped within the depocenters of the major sedimentary basin across the Ross Sea, indicative of widespread open marine deposition with reduced glacimarine influence. At the MMCT, a distinct erosive surface is interpreted as representing large-scale marine-based ice sheet advance over most of the Ross Sea paleo-continental shelf. The regional mapping of the seismic stratigraphic architecture and its correlation to drilling data indicate a regional transition through the Miocene from growth of ice caps and inland ice sheets with marine-terminating margins, to widespread marine-based ice sheets extending across the outer continental shelf in the Ross Sea.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maxine King ◽  
Jenny Gales ◽  
Jan Sverre Laberg ◽  
Robert McKay ◽  
Laura De Santis ◽  
...  

&lt;p&gt;The repeated proximity of West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) ice to the Ross Sea continental shelf break has been inferred to directly influence sedimentary processes occurring on the continental slope. Sediment delivery to the shelf edge by grounded ice sheets during past glacials may have influenced turbidity current and debris flow activity, thus the records of these processes can be used to study the past history of the WAIS. However, the continental slope record may also be affected by density-driven or geostrophic oceanic bottom currents, therefore additionally providing an archive on their history and interplay with depositional mechanisms that are driven by ice sheets. Here, we investigate the upper 120.94m of one sediment core (length: 208.58mbsf) from Hole U1525A collected by International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Expedition 374 in 2018. Hole U1525A is located on the south-western levee of the Hillary Canyon (Ross Sea, Antarctica) and the depositional lobe of the nearby trough-mouth fan. Using core descriptions, grain size analysis, and physical properties datasets, we develop a lithofacies scheme that allows construction of a detailed depositional model and environmental history of past ice sheet-ocean interaction at the eastern Ross Sea continental shelf break/slope for the past 2.4 Ma. The earliest Pleistocene interval (2.4-1.35 Ma) is interpreted as a largely hemipelagic environment dominated by ice-rafting and reworking/deposition by relatively persistent bottom current activity. Microfossil barren, finely interlaminated sediments are interpreted as contourites deposited under the presence of multi-year sea-ice. During the latter part of the early Pleistocene (1.35-0.8 Ma), bottom current activity was weaker and turbiditic processes more common, likely related to the increased proximity of grounded ice at the shelf edge. Much of the fine-grained sediments were probably deposited via gravitational settlement from turbid plumes, and a sustained nepheloid layer. The thickest interval of turbidite interlamination occurs after ~1 Ma, following the onset of the &amp;#8220;Mid-Pleistocene Transition&amp;#8221; (MPT), interpreted as a time when most terrestrial ice sheets increased in size and glacial periods were longer and more extreme. Sedimentation in the mid-late Pleistocene (&lt; ~0.8 Ma) was dominated by glacigenic debris flow deposition, as the trough mouth fan that dominates the eastern Ross Sea continental shelf prograded and expanded over the site. More frequent and longer-lasting fully-extended glacial conditions allowed the continued progradation of the trough-mouth fan across the core site. These findings will help to improve estimations of WAIS ice extent in future Ross Sea shelf-based modelling studies, and provide a basis for more detailed analysis of the formation and growth of the WAIS under distinct oceanographic conditions.&lt;/p&gt;


Geosciences ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 34
Author(s):  
Santiago Moliner-Aznar ◽  
Manuel Martín-Martín ◽  
Tomás Rodríguez-Estrella ◽  
Gregorio Romero-Sánchez

The Cenozoic Malaguide Basin from Sierra Espuña (Internal Betic Zone, S Spain) due to the quality of outcropping, areal representation, and continuity in the sedimentation can be considered a key-basin. In the last 30 years, a large number of studies with very different methodological approaches have been done in the area. Models indicate an evolution from passive margin to wedge-top basin from Late Cretaceous to Early Miocene. Sedimentation changes from limestone platforms with scarce terrigenous inputs, during the Paleocene to Early Oligocene, to the deep basin with huge supplies of turbidite sandstones and conglomerates during the Late Oligocene to Early Miocene. The area now appears structured as an antiformal stack with evidence of synsedimentary tectonics. The Cenozoic tectono-sedimentary basin evolution is related to three phases: (1) flexural tectonics during most of the Paleogene times to create the basin; (2) fault and fold compartmentation of the basin with the creation of structural highs and subsiding areas related to blind-fault-propagation folds, deforming the basin from south to north during Late Oligocene to Early Aquitanian times; (3) thin-skin thrusting tectonics when the basin began to be eroded during the Late Aquitanian-Burdigalian. In recent times some works on the geological heritage of the area have been performed trying to diffuse different geological aspects of the sector to the general public. A review of the studies performed and the revisiting of the area allow proposing different key-outcrops to follow the tectono-sedimentary evolution of the Cenozoic basin from this area. Eight sites of geological interest have been selected (Cretaceous-Cenozoic boundary, Paleocene Mula Fm, Lower Eocene Espuña-Valdelaparra Fms, Middle Eocene Malvariche-Cánovas Fms, Lowermost Oligocene As Fm, Upper Oligocene-Lower Aquitanian Bosque Fm, Upper Oligocene-Aquitanian Río Pliego Fm, Burdigalian El Niño Fm) and an evaluation has been performed to obtain four parameters: the scientific value, the educational and touristic potential, and the degradation risk. The firsts three parameters obtained values above 50 being considered of “high” or “very high” interest (“very high” in most of the cases). The last parameter shows always values below 50 indicating a “moderate” or “low” risk of degradation. The obtained values allow us considering the tectono-sedimentary evolution of this basin worthy of being proposed as a geological heritage.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-14
Author(s):  
Qin Li ◽  
Haibin Wu ◽  
Jun Cheng ◽  
Shuya Zhu ◽  
Chunxia Zhang ◽  
...  

Abstract The East Asian winter monsoon (EAWM) is one of the most dynamic components of the global climate system. Although poorly understood, knowledge of long-term spatial differences in EAWM variability during the glacial–interglacial cycles is important for understanding the dynamic processes of the EAWM. We reconstructed the spatiotemporal characteristics of the EAWM since the last glacial maximum (LGM) using a comparison of proxy records and long-term transient simulations. A loess grain-size record from northern China (a sensitive EAWM proxy) and the sea surface temperature gradient of an EAWM index in sediments of the southern South China Sea were compared. The data–model comparison indicates pronounced spatial differences in EAWM evolution, with a weakened EAWM since the LGM in northern China but a strengthened EAWM from the LGM to the early Holocene, followed by a weakening trend, in southern China. The model results suggest that variations in the EAWM in northern China were driven mainly by changes in atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) concentration and Northern Hemisphere ice sheets, whereas orbital insolation and ice sheets were important drivers in southern China. We propose that the relative importance of insolation, ice sheets, and atmospheric CO2 for EAWM evolution varied spatially within East Asia.


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