Evolution of the early Antarctic ice ages

Publication date

2017-04-11

Authors

Liebrand, DiederikISNI 0000000453478593
De Bakker, Anouk T.M.ISNI 0000000459787530
Beddow, Helen M.
Wilson, Paul A.
Bohaty, Steven M.
Ruessink, GerbenORCID 0000-0001-9526-6087ISNI 0000000117053107
Pälike, Heiko
Batenburg, S. J.ORCID 0000-0002-4076-1248ISNI 0000000517763562
Hilgen, FritsORCID 0000-0002-5683-259XISNI 0000000385598525
Hodell, David A.

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Abstract

Understanding the stability of the early Antarctic ice cap in the geological past is of societal interest because present-day atmospheric CO2 concentrations have reached values comparable to those estimated for the Oligocene and the Early Miocene epochs. Here we analyze a new high-resolution deep-sea oxygen isotope (δ18O) record from the South Atlantic Ocean spanning an interval between 30.1 My and 17.1 My ago. The record displays major oscillations in deep-sea temperature and Antarctic ice volume in response to the ∼110-ky eccentricity modulation of precession. Conservative minimum ice volume estimates show that waxing and waning of at least ∼85 to 110% of the volume of the present East Antarctic Ice Sheet is required to explain many of the ∼110-ky cycles. Antarctic ice sheets were typically largest during repeated glacial cycles of the mid-Oligocene (∼28.0 My to ∼26.3 My ago) and across the Oligocene−Miocene Transition (∼23.0 My ago). However, the high-amplitude glacial−interglacial cycles of the mid-Oligocene are highly symmetrical, indicating a more direct response to eccentricity modulation of precession than their Early Miocene counterparts, which are distinctly asymmetrical—indicative of prolonged ice buildup and delayed, but rapid, glacial terminations. We hypothesize that the long-term transition to a warmer climate state with sawtooth-shaped glacial cycles in the Early Miocene was brought about by subsidence and glacial erosion in West Antarctica during the Late Oligocene and/or a change in the variability of atmospheric CO2 levels on astronomical time scales that is not yet captured in existing proxy reconstructions.

Keywords

unipolar icehouse, early Antarctic ice sheet, Oligocene−Miocene, glacial−interglacial cycle geometries, bispectral analysis, General

Citation

Liebrand, D, De Bakker, A T M, Beddow, H M, Wilson, P A, Bohaty, S M, Ruessink, G, Pälike, H, Batenburg, S J, Hilgen, F J, Hodell, D A, Huck, C E, Kroon, D, Raffi, I, Saes, M J M, Van Dijk, A E & Lourens, L J 2017, 'Evolution of the early Antarctic ice ages', Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, vol. 114, no. 15, pp. 3867–3872. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1615440114