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Cretaceous sea-surface temperature evolution: constraints from TEX86 and planktonic foraminiferal oxygen isotopes

Cretaceous sea-surface temperature evolution: constraints from TEX86 and planktonic foraminiferal oxygen isotopes
Cretaceous sea-surface temperature evolution: constraints from TEX86 and planktonic foraminiferal oxygen isotopes
It is well established that greenhouse conditions prevailed during the Cretaceous Period (~ 145–66 Ma). Determining the exact nature of the greenhouse-gas forcing, climatic warming and climate sensitivity remains, however, an active topic of research. Quantitative and qualitative geochemical and palaeontological proxies provide valuable observational constraints on Cretaceous climate. In particular, reconstructions of Cretaceous sea-surface temperatures (SSTs) have been revolutionised firstly by the recognition that clay-rich sequences can host exceptionally preserved planktonic foraminifera allowing for reliable oxygen-isotope analyses and, secondly by the development of the organic palaeothermometer TEX86, based on the distribution of marine archaeal membrane lipids. Here we provide a new compilation and synthesis of available planktonic foraminiferal δ18O (δ18Opl) and TEX86-SST proxy data for almost the entire Cretaceous Period. The compilation uses SSTs recalculated from published raw data, allowing examination of the sensitivity of each proxy to the calculation method (e.g., choice of calibration) and places all data on a common timescale. Overall, the compilation shows many similarities with trends present in individual records of Cretaceous climate change. For example, both SST proxies and benthic foraminiferal δ18O records indicate maximum warmth in the Cenomanian–Turonian interval. Our reconstruction of the evolution of latitudinal temperature gradients (low, <±30°, minus higher, >±48°, palaeolatitudes) reveals temporal changes. In the Valanginian–Aptian, the low-to-higher mid-latitudinal temperature gradient was weak (decreasing from ~ 10–17 °C in the Valanginian, to ~ 3–5 °C in the Aptian, based on TEX86-SSTs). In the Cenomanian–Santonian, reconstructed latitudinal temperature contrasts are also small relative to modern (< 14 °C, based on low-latitude TEX86 and δ18Opl SSTs minus higher latitude δ18Opl SSTs, compared with ~ 20 °C for the modern). In the mid-Campanian to end-Maastrichtian, latitudinal temperature gradients strengthened (~ 19–21 °C, based on low-latitude TEX86 and δ18Opl SSTs minus higher latitude δ18Opl SSTs), with cooling occurring at low-, middle- and higher palaeolatitude sites, implying global surface-ocean cooling and/or changes in ocean heat transport in the Late Cretaceous. These reconstructed long-term trends are resilient, regardless of the choice of proxy (TEX86 or δ18Opl) or calibration. This new Cretaceous SST synthesis provides an up-to-date target for modelling studies investigating the mechanics of extreme climates.
Cretaceous Sea-surface temperatures Glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraethers TEX Organic geochemistry δO Planktonic foraminifera Geochemical proxies Palaeoclimate Greenhouse climate
0012-8252
224-247
O'Brien, Charlotte L.
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Robinson, Stuart A.
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Pancost, Richard D.
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Sinninghe Damsté, Jaap S.
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Schouten, Stefan
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Lunt, Daniel J.
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Alsenz, Heiko
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Bornemann, André
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Bottini, Cinzia
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Brassell, Simon C.
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Farnsworth, Alexander
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Forster, Astrid
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Huber, Brian T.
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Inglis, Gordon N.
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Littler, Kate
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Markwick, Paul
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McAnena, Alison
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Mutterlose, Jörg
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Naafs, B. David A.
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Püttmann, Wilhelm
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Sluijs, Appy
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van Helmond, Niels A.G.M.
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Vellekoop, Johan
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Wagner, Thomas
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Wrobel, Neil E.
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O'Brien, Charlotte L.
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Robinson, Stuart A.
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Pancost, Richard D.
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Sinninghe Damsté, Jaap S.
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Schouten, Stefan
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Lunt, Daniel J.
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Alsenz, Heiko
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Bornemann, André
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Bottini, Cinzia
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Brassell, Simon C.
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Farnsworth, Alexander
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Forster, Astrid
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Huber, Brian T.
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Inglis, Gordon N.
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Jenkyns, Hugh C.
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Linnert, Christian
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Littler, Kate
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Markwick, Paul
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McAnena, Alison
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Mutterlose, Jörg
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Naafs, B. David A.
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Püttmann, Wilhelm
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Sluijs, Appy
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van Helmond, Niels A.G.M.
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Vellekoop, Johan
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Wagner, Thomas
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Wrobel, Neil E.
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O'Brien, Charlotte L., Robinson, Stuart A., Pancost, Richard D., Sinninghe Damsté, Jaap S., Schouten, Stefan, Lunt, Daniel J., Alsenz, Heiko, Bornemann, André, Bottini, Cinzia, Brassell, Simon C., Farnsworth, Alexander, Forster, Astrid, Huber, Brian T., Inglis, Gordon N., Jenkyns, Hugh C., Linnert, Christian, Littler, Kate, Markwick, Paul, McAnena, Alison, Mutterlose, Jörg, Naafs, B. David A., Püttmann, Wilhelm, Sluijs, Appy, van Helmond, Niels A.G.M., Vellekoop, Johan, Wagner, Thomas and Wrobel, Neil E. (2017) Cretaceous sea-surface temperature evolution: constraints from TEX86 and planktonic foraminiferal oxygen isotopes. Earth-Science Reviews, 172, 224-247. (doi:10.1016/j.earscirev.2017.07.012).

Record type: Article

Abstract

It is well established that greenhouse conditions prevailed during the Cretaceous Period (~ 145–66 Ma). Determining the exact nature of the greenhouse-gas forcing, climatic warming and climate sensitivity remains, however, an active topic of research. Quantitative and qualitative geochemical and palaeontological proxies provide valuable observational constraints on Cretaceous climate. In particular, reconstructions of Cretaceous sea-surface temperatures (SSTs) have been revolutionised firstly by the recognition that clay-rich sequences can host exceptionally preserved planktonic foraminifera allowing for reliable oxygen-isotope analyses and, secondly by the development of the organic palaeothermometer TEX86, based on the distribution of marine archaeal membrane lipids. Here we provide a new compilation and synthesis of available planktonic foraminiferal δ18O (δ18Opl) and TEX86-SST proxy data for almost the entire Cretaceous Period. The compilation uses SSTs recalculated from published raw data, allowing examination of the sensitivity of each proxy to the calculation method (e.g., choice of calibration) and places all data on a common timescale. Overall, the compilation shows many similarities with trends present in individual records of Cretaceous climate change. For example, both SST proxies and benthic foraminiferal δ18O records indicate maximum warmth in the Cenomanian–Turonian interval. Our reconstruction of the evolution of latitudinal temperature gradients (low, <±30°, minus higher, >±48°, palaeolatitudes) reveals temporal changes. In the Valanginian–Aptian, the low-to-higher mid-latitudinal temperature gradient was weak (decreasing from ~ 10–17 °C in the Valanginian, to ~ 3–5 °C in the Aptian, based on TEX86-SSTs). In the Cenomanian–Santonian, reconstructed latitudinal temperature contrasts are also small relative to modern (< 14 °C, based on low-latitude TEX86 and δ18Opl SSTs minus higher latitude δ18Opl SSTs, compared with ~ 20 °C for the modern). In the mid-Campanian to end-Maastrichtian, latitudinal temperature gradients strengthened (~ 19–21 °C, based on low-latitude TEX86 and δ18Opl SSTs minus higher latitude δ18Opl SSTs), with cooling occurring at low-, middle- and higher palaeolatitude sites, implying global surface-ocean cooling and/or changes in ocean heat transport in the Late Cretaceous. These reconstructed long-term trends are resilient, regardless of the choice of proxy (TEX86 or δ18Opl) or calibration. This new Cretaceous SST synthesis provides an up-to-date target for modelling studies investigating the mechanics of extreme climates.

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Accepted/In Press date: 24 July 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 27 July 2017
Published date: September 2017
Keywords: Cretaceous Sea-surface temperatures Glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraethers TEX Organic geochemistry δO Planktonic foraminifera Geochemical proxies Palaeoclimate Greenhouse climate

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 437530
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/437530
ISSN: 0012-8252
PURE UUID: dca008c1-237c-4cf8-bfa7-7da4972311fb
ORCID for Gordon N. Inglis: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0032-4668

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Date deposited: 04 Feb 2020 17:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:00

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Contributors

Author: Charlotte L. O'Brien
Author: Stuart A. Robinson
Author: Richard D. Pancost
Author: Jaap S. Sinninghe Damsté
Author: Stefan Schouten
Author: Daniel J. Lunt
Author: Heiko Alsenz
Author: André Bornemann
Author: Cinzia Bottini
Author: Simon C. Brassell
Author: Alexander Farnsworth
Author: Astrid Forster
Author: Brian T. Huber
Author: Hugh C. Jenkyns
Author: Christian Linnert
Author: Kate Littler
Author: Paul Markwick
Author: Alison McAnena
Author: Jörg Mutterlose
Author: B. David A. Naafs
Author: Wilhelm Püttmann
Author: Appy Sluijs
Author: Niels A.G.M. van Helmond
Author: Johan Vellekoop
Author: Thomas Wagner
Author: Neil E. Wrobel

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