El Nino-Southern Oscillation variability from the Late Cretaceous Marca Shale of California
El Nino-Southern Oscillation variability from the Late Cretaceous Marca Shale of California
Changes in the possible behavior of El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) with global warming have provoked interest in records of ENSO from past “greenhouse” climate states. The latest Cretaceous laminated Marca Shale of California permits a seasonal-scale reconstruction of water column flux events and hence interannual paleoclimate variability. The annual flux cycle resembles that of the modern Gulf of California with diatoms characteristic of spring upwelling blooms followed by silt and clay, and is consistent with the existence of a paleo–North American Monsoon that brought input of terrigenous sediment during summer storms and precipitation runoff. Variation is also indicated in the extent of water column oxygenation by differences in lamina preservation. Time series analysis of interannual variability in terrigenous sediment and diatom flux and in the degree of bioturbation indicates strong periodicities in the quasi-biennial (2.1–2.8 yr) and low-frequency (4.1–6.3 yr) bands both characteristic of ENSO forcing, as well as decadal frequencies. This evidence for robust Late Cretaceous ENSO variability does not support the theory of a “permanent El Niño,” in the sense of a continual El Niño–like state, in periods of warmer climate.
15-18
Davies, Andrew
dc4a10da-d700-4b73-aa81-2976d3b79576
Kemp, Alan E.S.
131b479e-c2c4-47ae-abe1-ad968490960e
Weedon, Graham P.
bec08379-0210-428c-8acf-820b3f5b9c4d
Barron, John A.
3c30d71c-0c2e-459f-995d-d95eb0184178
2012
Davies, Andrew
dc4a10da-d700-4b73-aa81-2976d3b79576
Kemp, Alan E.S.
131b479e-c2c4-47ae-abe1-ad968490960e
Weedon, Graham P.
bec08379-0210-428c-8acf-820b3f5b9c4d
Barron, John A.
3c30d71c-0c2e-459f-995d-d95eb0184178
Davies, Andrew, Kemp, Alan E.S., Weedon, Graham P. and Barron, John A.
(2012)
El Nino-Southern Oscillation variability from the Late Cretaceous Marca Shale of California.
Geology, 40 (1), .
(doi:10.1130/G32329.1).
Abstract
Changes in the possible behavior of El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) with global warming have provoked interest in records of ENSO from past “greenhouse” climate states. The latest Cretaceous laminated Marca Shale of California permits a seasonal-scale reconstruction of water column flux events and hence interannual paleoclimate variability. The annual flux cycle resembles that of the modern Gulf of California with diatoms characteristic of spring upwelling blooms followed by silt and clay, and is consistent with the existence of a paleo–North American Monsoon that brought input of terrigenous sediment during summer storms and precipitation runoff. Variation is also indicated in the extent of water column oxygenation by differences in lamina preservation. Time series analysis of interannual variability in terrigenous sediment and diatom flux and in the degree of bioturbation indicates strong periodicities in the quasi-biennial (2.1–2.8 yr) and low-frequency (4.1–6.3 yr) bands both characteristic of ENSO forcing, as well as decadal frequencies. This evidence for robust Late Cretaceous ENSO variability does not support the theory of a “permanent El Niño,” in the sense of a continual El Niño–like state, in periods of warmer climate.
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Published date: 2012
Organisations:
Paleooceanography & Palaeoclimate
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 208505
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/208505
ISSN: 0091-7613
PURE UUID: ab3dd301-a3f5-4b27-a420-801c54b9d506
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Date deposited: 19 Jan 2012 14:08
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 04:43
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Author:
Andrew Davies
Author:
Graham P. Weedon
Author:
John A. Barron
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