Deoxygenation and organic carbon sequestration in the Tethyan realm associated with the middle Eocene climatic optimum

Publication date

2023

Authors

Cramwinckel, Marlow J.ISNI 0000000493281058
van der Ploeg, RobinISNI 0000000476398609
van Helmond, Niels A. G. M.ISNI 0000000419542360
Waarlo, Niels
Agnini, Claudia
Bijl, Peter K.ORCID 0000-0002-1710-4012ISNI 0000000394379738
van der Boon, A.ISNI 0000000493258894
Brinkhuis, H.ISNI 0000000389669175
Frieling, JoostISNI 0000000388750422
Krijgsman, WoutISNI 000000005000270X

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Article
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Abstract

The middle Eocene climatic optimum (ca. 40 Ma) stands out as a transient global warming phase of ~400 k.y. duration that interrupted long-term Eocene cooling; it has been associated with a rise in atmospheric CO2 concentrations that has been linked to a flare-up in Arabia-Eurasia continental arc volcanism. Increased organic carbon burial in the Tethys Ocean has been proposed as a carbon sequestration mechanism to bring the middle Eocene climatic optimum to an end. To further test these hypotheses, we assessed the sedimentary and geochemical expression of the middle Eocene climatic optimum in the northern Peri-Tethys, specifically, the organic-rich Kuma Formation of the Belaya River section, located on the edge of the Scythian Platform in the North Caucasus, Russia. We constructed an age-depth model using nannofossil chronobiostratigraphy. Throughout the studied middle Eocene interval (41.2–39.9 Ma), we documented sea-surface temperatures of 32–36 °C based on the tetraether index of tetraethers consisting of 86 carbons (TEX86), depending on proxy calibration, and during the early middle Eocene climatic optimum, we observed sea-surface warming of 2–3 °C. Despite the proximity of the section to the Arabia-Eurasia volcanic arc, the hypothesized source of volcanic CO2, we found no evidence for enhanced regional volcanism in sedimentary mercury concentrations. Sedimentary trace-element concentrations and iron speciation indicate reducing bottom waters throughout the middle Eocene, but the most reducing, even euxinic, conditions were reached during late middle Eocene climatic optimum cooling. This apparent regional decoupling between ocean warming and deoxygenation hints at a role for regional tectonics in causing basin restriction and anoxia. Associated excess organic carbon burial, extrapolated to the entire regional Kuma Formation, may have been ~8.1 Tg C yr–1, comprising ~450 Pg C over this ~55 k.y. interval. Combined with evidence for enhanced organic carbon drawdown in the western Peri-Tethys, this supports a quantitatively significant role for the basin in the termination of the middle Eocene climatic optimum by acting as a large organic carbon sink, and these results collectively illustrate that the closing Tethys Ocean might have affected global Paleogene climate.

Keywords

Atmospheric mercury, Bacterial gmgts, Biomarker paleothermometry, Dinoflagellate cysts, Glycerol ether lipids, North caucasus, Proxy data, Southwest pacific, Thermal maximum, Water-column, Geology, SDG 13 - Climate Action

Citation

Cramwinckel, M J, van der Ploeg, R, van Helmond, N A G M, Waarlo, N, Agnini, C, Bijl, P K, van der Boon, A, Brinkhuis, H, Frieling, J, Krijgsman, W, Mather, T A, Middelburg, J J, Peterse, F, Slomp, C P & Sluijs, A 2023, 'Deoxygenation and organic carbon sequestration in the Tethyan realm associated with the middle Eocene climatic optimum', Bulletin of the Geological Society of America, vol. 135, no. 5-6, pp. 1280-1296. https://doi.org/10.1130/B36280.1