Enhanced clay formation key in sustaining the Middle Eocene Climatic Optimum

Publication date

2023-08

Authors

Krause, Alexander J.
Sluijs, AppyORCID 0000-0003-2382-0215ISNI 0000000389163131
van der Ploeg, RobinISNI 0000000476398609
Lenton, Timothy M.
Pogge von Strandmann, Philip A.E.

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Document Type

Article
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Abstract

The Middle Eocene Climatic Optimum (around 40 million years ago) was a roughly 400,000-year-long global warming phase associated with an increase in atmospheric CO2 concentrations and deep-ocean acidification that interrupted the Eocene’s long-term cooling trend. The unusually long duration, compared with early Eocene global warming phases, is puzzling as temperature-dependent silicate weathering should have provided a negative feedback, drawing down CO2 over this timescale. Here we investigate silicate weathering during this climate warming event by measuring lithium isotope ratios (reported as δ7Li), which are a tracer for silicate weathering processes, from a suite of open-ocean carbonate-rich sediments. We find a positive δ7Li excursion—the only one identified for a warming event so far —of ~3‰. Box model simulations support this signal to reflect a global shift from congruent weathering, with secondary mineral dissolution, to incongruent weathering, with secondary mineral formation. We surmise that, before the climatic optimum, there was considerable soil shielding of the continents. An increase in continental volcanism initiated the warming event, but it was sustained by an increase in clay formation, which sequestered carbonate-forming cations, short-circuiting the carbonate–silicate cycle. Clay mineral dynamics may play an important role in the carbon cycle for climatic events occurring over intermediate (i.e., 100,000 year) timeframes.

Keywords

Carbon cycle, Element cycles, Geochemistry, Palaeoceanography, Palaeoclimate, General Earth and Planetary Sciences, SDG 13 - Climate Action, SDG 14 - Life Below Water

Citation

Krause, A J, Sluijs, A, van der Ploeg, R, Lenton, T M & Pogge von Strandmann, P A E 2023, 'Enhanced clay formation key in sustaining the Middle Eocene Climatic Optimum', Nature Geoscience, vol. 16, no. 8, pp. 730-738. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-023-01234-y