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Export of nutrient rich Northern Component Water preceded early Oligocene Antarctic glaciation

Export of nutrient rich Northern Component Water preceded early Oligocene Antarctic glaciation
Export of nutrient rich Northern Component Water preceded early Oligocene Antarctic glaciation
The onset of the North Atlantic Deep Water formation is thought to have coincided with Antarctic ice-sheet growth about 34 million years ago (Ma). However, this timing is debated, in part due to questions over the geochemical signature of the ancient Northern Component Water (NCW) formed in the deep North Atlantic. Here we present detailed geochemical records from North Atlantic sediment cores located close to sites of deep-water formation. We find that prior to 36 Ma, the northwestern Atlantic was stratified, with nutrient-rich, low-salinity bottom waters. This restricted basin transitioned into a conduit for NCW that began flowing southwards approximately one million years before the initial Antarctic glaciation. The probable trigger was tectonic adjustments in subarctic seas that enabled an increased exchange across the Greenland–Scotland Ridge. The increasing surface salinity and density strengthened the production of NCW. The late Eocene deep-water mass differed in its carbon isotopic signature from modern values as a result of the leakage of fossil carbon from the Arctic Ocean. Export of this nutrient-laden water provided a transient pulse of CO2 to the Earth system, which perhaps caused short-term warming, whereas the long-term effect of enhanced NCW formation was a greater northward heat transport that cooled Antarctica.
1752-0894
190-196
Coxall, Helen K.
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Huck, Claire E.
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Huber, Matthew
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Lear, Caroline H.
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Legarda-lisarri, Alba
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O’regan, Matt
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Sliwinska, Kasia K.
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Van De Flierdt, Tina
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De Boer, Agatha M.
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Zachos, James C.
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Backman, Jan
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Coxall, Helen K.
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Huck, Claire E.
c11ab07a-a14f-4703-b914-8dbabb38839c
Huber, Matthew
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Lear, Caroline H.
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Legarda-lisarri, Alba
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O’regan, Matt
2313c334-02da-410c-b167-94c51c016130
Sliwinska, Kasia K.
b64fef13-ba8c-46e1-ba0a-a59c83a714e8
Van De Flierdt, Tina
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De Boer, Agatha M.
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Zachos, James C.
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Backman, Jan
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Coxall, Helen K., Huck, Claire E., Huber, Matthew, Lear, Caroline H., Legarda-lisarri, Alba, O’regan, Matt, Sliwinska, Kasia K., Van De Flierdt, Tina, De Boer, Agatha M., Zachos, James C. and Backman, Jan (2018) Export of nutrient rich Northern Component Water preceded early Oligocene Antarctic glaciation. Nature Geoscience, 11 (3), 190-196. (doi:10.1038/s41561-018-0069-9).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The onset of the North Atlantic Deep Water formation is thought to have coincided with Antarctic ice-sheet growth about 34 million years ago (Ma). However, this timing is debated, in part due to questions over the geochemical signature of the ancient Northern Component Water (NCW) formed in the deep North Atlantic. Here we present detailed geochemical records from North Atlantic sediment cores located close to sites of deep-water formation. We find that prior to 36 Ma, the northwestern Atlantic was stratified, with nutrient-rich, low-salinity bottom waters. This restricted basin transitioned into a conduit for NCW that began flowing southwards approximately one million years before the initial Antarctic glaciation. The probable trigger was tectonic adjustments in subarctic seas that enabled an increased exchange across the Greenland–Scotland Ridge. The increasing surface salinity and density strengthened the production of NCW. The late Eocene deep-water mass differed in its carbon isotopic signature from modern values as a result of the leakage of fossil carbon from the Arctic Ocean. Export of this nutrient-laden water provided a transient pulse of CO2 to the Earth system, which perhaps caused short-term warming, whereas the long-term effect of enhanced NCW formation was a greater northward heat transport that cooled Antarctica.

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Coxall et al 2018NG resubmit 17Jan 23440_2_merged_1516194097 (AM) - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 22 January 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 26 February 2018
Published date: 1 March 2018

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Local EPrints ID: 418646
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/418646
ISSN: 1752-0894
PURE UUID: 94ba6da8-c473-42d3-bfc5-b9f614bbff21

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Date deposited: 14 Mar 2018 17:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 06:21

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Contributors

Author: Helen K. Coxall
Author: Claire E. Huck
Author: Matthew Huber
Author: Caroline H. Lear
Author: Alba Legarda-lisarri
Author: Matt O’regan
Author: Kasia K. Sliwinska
Author: Tina Van De Flierdt
Author: Agatha M. De Boer
Author: James C. Zachos
Author: Jan Backman

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