Enhanced Terrestrial Carbon Export From East Antarctica During the Early Eocene

Publication date

2022-02

Authors

Inglis, Gordon N.
Toney, Jaime L.
Zhu, Jiang
Poulsen, Christopher J.
Röhl, Ursula
Jamieson, Stewart S.R.
Pross, Jörg
Cramwinckel, Marlow J.ISNI 0000000493281058
Krishnan, Srinath
Pagani, Mark

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

cc_by

Abstract

Terrestrial organic carbon (TerrOC) acts as an important CO2 sink when transported via rivers to the ocean and sequestered in coastal marine sediments. This mechanism might help to modulate atmospheric CO2 levels over short- and long- timescales (103–106 years), but its importance during past warm climates remains unknown. Here we use terrestrial biomarkers preserved in coastal marine sediment samples from Wilkes Land, East Antarctica (∼67°S) to quantify TerrOC burial during the early Eocene (∼54.4–51.5 Ma). Terrestrial biomarker distributions indicate the delivery of plant-, soil-, and peat-derived organic carbon (OC) into the marine realm. Mass accumulation rates of plant- (long-chain n-alkane) and soil-derived (hopane) biomarkers dramatically increase between the earliest Eocene (∼54 Ma) and the early Eocene Climatic Optimum (EECO; ∼53 Ma). This coincides with increased OC mass accumulation rates and indicates enhanced TerrOC burial during the EECO. Leaf wax δ2H values indicate that the EECO was characterized by wetter conditions relative to the earliest Eocene, suggesting that hydroclimate exerts a first-order control on TerrOC export. Our results indicate that TerrOC burial in coastal marine sediments could have acted as an important negative feedback mechanism during the early Eocene, but also during other warm climate intervals.

Keywords

biomarkers, cenozoic, DeepMIP, greenhouse, leaf wax, lipids, Oceanography, Atmospheric Science, Palaeontology, SDG 13 - Climate Action, SDG 14 - Life Below Water

Citation

Inglis, G N, Toney, J L, Zhu, J, Poulsen, C J, Röhl, U, Jamieson, S S R, Pross, J, Cramwinckel, M J, Krishnan, S, Pagani, M, Bijl, P K & Bendle, J 2022, 'Enhanced Terrestrial Carbon Export From East Antarctica During the Early Eocene', Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology, vol. 37, no. 2, e2021PA004348, pp. 1-14. https://doi.org/10.1029/2021PA004348