Strength and variability of the Oligocene Southern Ocean surface temperature gradient

Publication date

2022-12-22

Authors

Hoem, Frida S.ISNI 0000000506748607
Sauermilch, IsabelISNI 0000000507309729
Aleksinski, Adam K.
Huber, Matthew
Peterse, FrancienORCID 0000-0001-8781-2826ISNI 0000000492917456
Sangiorgi, FrancescaORCID 0000-0003-4233-6154ISNI 0000000388191894
Bijl, P.K.ORCID 0000-0002-1710-4012ISNI 0000000394379738

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Large Oligocene Antarctic ice sheets co-existed with warm proximal waters offshore Wilkes Land. Here we provide a broader Southern Ocean perspective to such warmth by reconstructing the strength and variability of the Oligocene Australian-Antarctic latitudinal sea surface temperature gradient. Our Oligocene TEX86-based sea surface temperature record from offshore southern Australia shows temperate (20–29 °C) conditions throughout, despite northward tectonic drift. A persistent sea surface temperature gradient (~5–10 °C) exists between Australia and Antarctica, which increases during glacial intervals. The sea surface temperature gradient increases from ~26 Ma, due to Antarctic-proximal cooling. Meanwhile, benthic foraminiferal oxygen isotope decline indicates ice loss/deep-sea warming. These contrasting patterns are difficult to explain by greenhouse gas forcing alone. Timing of the sea surface temperature cooling coincides with deepening of Drake Passage and matches results of ocean model experiments that demonstrate that Drake Passage opening cools Antarctic proximal waters. We conclude that Drake Passage deepening cooled Antarctic coasts which enhanced thermal isolation of Antarctica.

Keywords

General Environmental Science, General Earth and Planetary Sciences

Citation

Hoem, F S, Sauermilch, I, Aleksinski, A K, Huber, M, Peterse, F, Sangiorgi, F & Bijl, P K 2022, 'Strength and variability of the Oligocene Southern Ocean surface temperature gradient', Communications Earth and Environment, vol. 3, no. 1, 322, pp. 1-8. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-022-00666-5