The Eocene-Oligocene transition: a review of marine and terrestrial proxy data, models and model-data comparisons

Publication date

2020

Authors

Hutchinson, David
Coxall, Helen
Lunt, Daniel
Steinthorsdottir, Margret
de Boer, Agatha
Baatsen, MichielORCID 0000-0002-0123-7005ISNI 0000000492798776
von der Heydt, AnnaORCID 0000-0002-5557-3282ISNI 0000000395085782
Huber, Matthew
Kennedy-Asser, Alan
Kunzmann, Lutz

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

/dk/atira/pure/researchoutput/researchoutputtypes/workingpaper/preprint
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License

cc_by

Abstract

The Eocene-Oligocene transition (EOT) from a largely ice-free greenhouse world to an icehouse climate with the first major glaciation of Antarctica was a phase of major climate and environmental change occurring ~34 million years ago (Ma) and lasting ~500 kyr. The change is marked by a global shift in deep sea d 18 O representing a combination of deep-ocean 30 cooling and global ice sheet growth. At the same time, multiple independent proxies for sea surface temperature indicate a surface ocean cooling, and major changes in global fauna and flora record a shift toward more cold-climate adapted species. The major explanations of this transition that have been suggested are a decline in atmospheric CO2, and changes to ocean gateways, while orbital forcing likely influenced the precise timing of the glaciation. This work reviews and synthesises proxy evidence of paleogeography, temperature, ice sheets, ocean circulation, and CO2 change from the marine and terrestrial realms. 35 Furthermore, we quantitatively compare proxy records of change to an ensemble of model simulations of temperature change across the EOT. The model simulations compare three forcing mechanisms across the EOT: CO2 decrease, paleogeographic https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-2020-68 Preprint. Discussion started: 18 May 2020 c Author(s) 2020. CC BY 4.0 License. 2 changes, and ice sheet growth. We find that CO2 forcing provides by far the best explanation of the combined proxy evidence, and based on our model ensemble, we estimate that a CO2 decrease of about 1.6x across the EOT (e.g. from 910 to 560 ppmv) achieves the best fit to the temperature change recorded in the proxies. This model-derived CO2 decrease is consistent with 40 proxy estimates of CO2 decline at the EOT.

Keywords

SDG 13 - Climate Action, SDG 14 - Life Below Water

Citation

Hutchinson, D, Coxall, H, Lunt, D, Steinthorsdottir, M, de Boer, A, Baatsen, M, von der Heydt, A, Huber, M, Kennedy-Asser, A, Kunzmann, L, Ladant, J-B, Lear, C, Moraweck, K, Pearson, P, Piga, E, Pound, M, Salzmann, U, Scher, H, Sijp, W, Śliwińska, K, Wilson, P A & Zhang, Z 2020 'The Eocene-Oligocene transition: a review of marine and terrestrial proxy data, models and model-data comparisons' Climate of the Past, EGU. https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-2020-68