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West Antarctic archipelago covered by cool-temperate forests during the early Oligocene glaciation

Authors :
Klages, Johann Philipp
Hillenbrand, Claus-Dieter
Bohaty, Steven M.
Salzmann, Ulrich
Bickert, Torsten
Lohmann, Gerrit
Gohl, Karsten
Kuhn, Gerhard
Titschack, Jürgen
Müller, Juliane
Bauersachs, Thorsten
Frederichs, Thomas
Larter, Robert D.
Hochmuth, Katharina
Ehrmann, Werner
Rodríguez Tovar, Francisco J.
Schmiedl, Gerhard
van de Flierdt, Tina
Spiegel, Cornelia
Eisenhauer, Anton
PS104, Science Team of Expedition
Klages, Johann Philipp
Hillenbrand, Claus-Dieter
Bohaty, Steven M.
Salzmann, Ulrich
Bickert, Torsten
Lohmann, Gerrit
Gohl, Karsten
Kuhn, Gerhard
Titschack, Jürgen
Müller, Juliane
Bauersachs, Thorsten
Frederichs, Thomas
Larter, Robert D.
Hochmuth, Katharina
Ehrmann, Werner
Rodríguez Tovar, Francisco J.
Schmiedl, Gerhard
van de Flierdt, Tina
Spiegel, Cornelia
Eisenhauer, Anton
PS104, Science Team of Expedition
Source :
EPIC3vEGU21: Gather Online, Online, 2021-04-19-2021-04-30
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The Eocene-Oligocene Transition (~34.4–33.7 Ma) marks a major step in the long-term evolution from the greenhouse climate of the Early Palaeogene to the icehouse regime of the Late Neogene and Quaternary. However, it remains uncertain which landmasses were covered by ice sheets during the Early Oligocene Glacial Maximum (~33.7–33.2 Ma), an interval of peak glaciation inferred from deep-sea benthic foraminifera oxygen isotope records that immediately follows the Eocene-Oligocene Transition. The scarcity of Late Eocene and Early Oligocene continental and shallow-marine records in both Arctic and Antarctic regions has prevented the reconstruction of environmental conditions and ice-sheet extent during the Early Oligocene, which is critical for assessing ice–ocean–atmosphere interactions during early stages of the Cenozoic icehouse. Here, we present the first Early Oligocene shallow-marine record from the Pacific margin of West Antarctica, recovered from the central Amundsen Sea Embayment shelf on RV Polarstern expedition PS104 at Site 21. Marine mudstones recovered at this site document the presence of a vegetated archipelago at a palaeo-latitude of 73.5°S. Pollen assemblages and organic biomarker proxies indicate a cool-temperate Nothofagus-dominated forest situated within a productive marine archipelago. No evidence for marine terminating ice was detected in the cores from Site 21, thus indicating that the West Antarctic Ice Sheet was small or entirely absent during the Early Oligocene.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
EPIC3vEGU21: Gather Online, Online, 2021-04-19-2021-04-30
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1376972783
Document Type :
Electronic Resource