Astronomical pacing of late Palaeocene to early Eocene global warming events
Publication date
2005
Authors
Lourens, L.J.
Sluijs, A.
Kroon, D.
Zachos, J.C.
Thomas, E.
Röhl, U.
Bowles, J.
Raffi, I.
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
DOI
Document Type
Article
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(c)UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2005
Abstract
At the boundary between the Palaeocene and Eocene epochs,
about 55 million years ago, the Earth experienced a strong global
warming event, the Palaeocene–Eocene thermal maximum. The
leading hypothesis to explain the extreme greenhouse conditions
prevalent during this period is the dissociation of 1,400 to
2,800 gigatonnes of methane from ocean clathrates, resulting
in a large negative carbon isotope excursion and severe carbonate
dissolution in marine sediments. Possible triggering mechanisms
for this event include crossing a threshold temperature as the
Earth warmed gradually, comet impact, explosive volcanism
or ocean current reorganization and erosion at continental
slopes, whereas orbital forcing has been excluded. Here we
report a distinct carbonate-poor red clay layer in deep-sea cores
from Walvis ridge, which we term the Elmo horizon. Using
orbital tuning, we estimate deposition of the Elmo horizon at
about 2 million years after the Palaeocene–Eocene thermal maximum.
The Elmo horizon has similar geochemical and biotic
characteristics as the Palaeocene–Eocene thermal maximum,
but of smaller magnitude. It is coincident with carbon isotope
depletion events in other ocean basins, suggesting that it
represents a second global thermal maximum. We show that
both events correspond to maxima in the ∼405-kyr and
∼100-kyr eccentricity cycles that post-date prolonged minima in
the 2.25-Myr eccentricity cycle, implying that they are indeed
astronomically paced.
Keywords
Geowetenschappen en aanverwante (milieu)wetenschappen, Earth sciences, Global warming, Climate change, Methane