Early Late Pliocene biochronology and surface water temperature variations in the Mediterranean
Publication date
1989
Authors
Zachariasse, W.J.
Zijderveld, J.D.A.
Lagereis, C.G.
Hilgen, F.J.
Verhallen, P.J.J.M.
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Supervisors
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Document Type
Article
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Abstract
A high-resolution magnetobiostratigraphy is presented for the early Late Pliocene in Sicily. Paleomagnetic measurements
on samples from 100 stratigraphic levels provide an unprecedented high-quality polarity sequence which
extends from the upper reversed Gilbert to the upper normal Gauss subchron. The resultant chronology for the early
Late Pliocene provides ages for the following principal Mediterranean bioevents: (1) FOD Globorotalia crassaformis
at 3.40 Ma, (2) prolonged absence of Globorotalia puncticulata between 3.38 and 3 16 Ma, (3) LOD Uvigerina rutila
at 3 16 Ma, (4) LOD Sphaeroidinellopsis seminulina at 3.07 Ma, (5) LOD Globoquadrina altispira at 3 04 Ma and
(6) LOD Cibicides italicus at 2.96 Ma.
Summer and winter surface water temperature estimates for the period 3 50 to 2 92 Ma are based on the abundances
of Globigerinoides sacculifer and Globorotalia puncticulata in 111 samples with an average resolution of some 5000
years.
Short-term variations in temperature of the surface water and in colour and carbonate content of the sediment are
primarily controlled by the equinoxal precession. A higher seasonality during deposition of the grey-coloured, carbonate-
poor facies suggests that at that time the summer solstice occurred near perihelion, whereas an inverse alignment
occurred at the time of deposition of white-coloured, carbonate-inch layers. This phase-relationship between the
precession cycle and grey-coloured layers is also valid for the sapropels which began to intercalate in the grey-coloured
layers at 2 94 Ma.
Long-term changes in surface water temperatures include a warming between 3 38 and 3 18 Ma followed by a cooling
from 3 18 to 3 03 Ma. The warming of Mediterranean surface waters at 3 38 Ma is believed to be associated with the
final closure of the Isthmus of Panama. Consequent strengthening of the Gulf Stream rejected larger volumes of warm
surface water into the North Atlantic Drift and eastern boundary current and this caused surface water temperatures
in the mid to high-latitude northeast Atlantic and Mediterranean to rose. The subsequent climatic cooling at 3 18 Ma
is linked to a first stage of Northern Hemisphere continental ice growth.
Keywords
Mediterranean, Pliocene, climate change, biochronology