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A fifteen-million-year surface- and subsurface-integrated TEX86 temperature record from the eastern equatorial Atlantic.

Authors :
van der Weijst, Carolien M. H.
van der Laan, Koen J.
Peterse, Francien
Reichart, Gert-Jan
Sangiorgi, Francesca
Schouten, Stefan
Veenstra, Tjerk J. T.
Sluijs, Appy
Source :
Climate of the Past Discussions; 9/9/2021, p1-23, 23p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

TEX<subscript>86</subscript> is a paleothermometer based on Thaumarcheotal glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraether (GDGT) lipids and is one of the most frequently used proxies for sea-surface temperature (SST) in warmer-than-present climates. However, the calibration of TEX<subscript>86</subscript> to SST is controversial because its correlation to SST is not significantly stronger than that to depth-integrated surface to subsurface temperatures. Because GDGTs are not exclusively produced in and exported from the surface ocean, sedimentary GDGTs may contain a depth-integrated signal that is sensitive to local subsurface temperature variability, which can only be proved in downcore studies. Here, we present a 15 Myr TEX<subscript>86</subscript> record from ODP Site 959 in the Gulf of Guinea and use additional proxies to elucidate the source of the recorded TEX<subscript>86</subscript> variability. Relatively high GDGT[2/3] ratio values from 13.6 Ma indicate that sedimentary GDGTs were partly sourced from deeper (>200 m) waters. Moreover, late Pliocene TEX<subscript>86</subscript> variability is highly sensitive to glacial-interglacial cyclicity, as is also recorded by benthic d<superscript>18</superscript>O, while the variability within dinoflagellate assemblages and surface/thermocline temperature records (U<superscript>k</superscript>, 37 and Mg/Ca), is not primarily explained by glacial-interglacial cyclicity. Combined, these observations are best explained by TEX<subscript>86</subscript> sensitivity to sub-thermocline temperature variability. We conclude that the TEX86 record represents a depth-integrated signal that incorporates a SST and a deeper component, which is compatible the present-day depth distribution of Thaumarchaeota and with the GDGT[2/3] distribution in core tops. The depth-integrated TEX86 record can potentially be used to infer SST variability, because subsurface temperature variability is generally tightly linked to SST variability. Using a subsurface calibration with peak calibration weight between 100-350 m, we estimate that east equatorial Atlantic SST cooled by ~5°C between the Late Miocene and Pleistocene. On shorter timescales, we use the TEX<subscript>86</subscript> record as an Antarctic Intermediate Water (AAIW) proxy and evaluate climatological leads and lags around the Pliocene M2 glacial (~3.3 Ma). Our record, combined with published information, suggests that the M2 glacial was marked by AAIW cooling during an austral summer insolation minimum, and that decreasing CO<subscript>2</subscript> levels were a feedback, not the initiator, of glacial expansion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18149324
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Climate of the Past Discussions
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
152528180
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-2021-92