subject predicate object context
67242 Creator d8b4bad32e975f1f1e93a4020d9115c4
67242 Creator 777eedacb38a41636200990f73ab1858
67242 Creator d118c764f30dff784527bd7fbffb733b
67242 Date 2019-09-03
67242 Is Part Of repository
67242 abstract The Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC) is a key component of the modern global ocean circulation, distributing heat, salt and biologically essential nutrients globally, and exerting a fundamental influence on regional and hemispheric climates. Yet we have little understanding how unstable the AMOC will be, or its sensitivity to climate change, under acute climatic warmth such as that marking Earth’s future. The nature of any inter-hemispheric competition in deep water formation during such warmth is another unknown. These fundamental gaps in our knowledge prevent us testing the simulations of ocean models for past warm climates, and thus also diminish our confidence in the capabilities of these models to predict changes to our oceans during our future climate trajectory. A solution is to reconstruct AMOC stability during an interval of past acute warmth. The early-middle Eocene (50-47 Myr ago) was a time of extreme warmth. The deep oceans were 10 to 14°C warmer than today (Sexton et al., 2006) and atmospheric carbon dioxide levels were ~2-4 times higher (Anagnostou et al., 2016; Pagani, 2005). Yet, it is currently unclear whether a well-developed AMOC existed during the early-middle Eocene, how sensitive it was to orbital forcing, and what influence it exerted on the Earth’s climate during the early-middle Eocene (Hohbein et al., 2012). To reconstruct the structure of any early-middle AMOC, we use an Atlantic transect of tightly correlated sites, spanning the northern Atlantic to Southern Ocean. New bulk carbonate δ13C records for six new drill sites form a high resolution chemostratigraphy for each site, allow for detailed inter-site correlations and provide a common, high resolution age model. We use Nd isotopes to reconstruct water mass source pathways and benthic foraminifer δ13C to reconstruct water mass ventilation state across a ~400 kyr interval of magnetochron C21n to resolve orbital-scale dynamism in the structure and stability of Atlantic Ocean circulation during extreme greenhouse warmth.
67242 authorList authors
67242 presentedAt ext-7c12565226ceb3e3f845e70d659e4cc3
67242 status peerReviewed
67242 uri http://data.open.ac.uk/oro/document/972520
67242 uri http://data.open.ac.uk/oro/document/972530
67242 uri http://data.open.ac.uk/oro/document/981396
67242 uri http://data.open.ac.uk/oro/document/981401
67242 uri http://data.open.ac.uk/oro/document/981402
67242 uri http://data.open.ac.uk/oro/document/981403
67242 uri http://data.open.ac.uk/oro/document/981404
67242 uri http://data.open.ac.uk/oro/document/981405
67242 uri http://data.open.ac.uk/oro/document/982234
67242 type AcademicArticle
67242 type Article
67242 label McIntyre, Andrew ; Sexton, Philip and Anand, Pallavi (2019). Reconstructing the structure of Atlantic Ocean circulation during early-middle Eocene extreme climatic warmth. In: 13th International Conference on Paleoceanography, 2-6 Sep 2019, Sydney, Australia.
67242 Title Reconstructing the structure of Atlantic Ocean circulation during early-middle Eocene extreme climatic warmth
67242 in dataset oro