Abstract

Abstract. The long-term cooling trend from middle to late Eocene was punctuated by several large-scale climate perturbations that culminated in a shift to "icehouse" climates at the Eocene–Oligocene transition. We present radiolarian micro-fossil assemblage and foraminiferal oxygen and carbon stable isotope data from Deep Sea Drilling Project (DSDP) sites 277, 280, 281, and 283 and Ocean Drilling Project (ODP) Site 1172 to identify significant oceanographic changes in the southwest Pacific through this climate transition (~ 40–30 Ma). We find that the Middle Eocene Climatic Optimum at ~ 40 Ma, which is truncated but identified by a negative shift in foraminiferal δ18O values at Site 277, is associated with a small increase in radiolarian taxa with low-latitude affinities (5 % of total fauna). In the early late Eocene at ~ 37 Ma, a positive oxygen isotope shift at Site 277 is correlated with the Priabonian Oxygen Isotope Maximum (PrOM). Radiolarian abundance, diversity, and preservation increase within this cooling event at Site 277 at the same time as diatom abundance. A negative δ18O excursion above the PrOM is correlated with a late Eocene warming event (~ 36.4 Ma). Radiolarian abundance and diversity decline within this event and taxa with low-latitude affinities reappear. Apart from this short-lived warming event, the PrOM and latest Eocene radiolarian assemblages are characterised by abundant high-latitude taxa. High-latitude taxa are also abundant during the late Eocene and early Oligocene (~ 38–30 Ma) at DSDP sites 280, 281, 283 and 1172 and are associated with very high diatom abundance. We therefore infer a northward expansion of high-latitude radiolarian taxa onto the Campbell Plateau in the latest Eocene. In the early Oligocene there is an overall decrease in radiolarian abundance and diversity at Site 277, and diatoms are scarce. These data indicate that, once the Antarctic Circumpolar Current was established in the early Oligocene (~ 30 Ma), a frontal system similar to present day developed, with nutrient-depleted Subantarctic waters bathing the area around DSDP Site 277, resulting in a more restricted siliceous plankton assemblage.

Highlights

  • The long-term evolution of climate through the early to middle Palaeogene (56–34 Ma) has been established from geochemical proxies and palaeontological data

  • Broad age control for Deep Sea Drilling Project (DSDP) Site 277 is based on the biostratigraphic synthesis of Hollis et al (1997), who correlated the succession to Southern Hemisphere (SH) radiolarian zones RP6 to RP15

  • Middle Eocene–early Oligocene radiolarian assemblages from DSDP sites 277, 280, 281, 283 and Ocean Drilling Project (ODP) Site 1172 were examined to investigate the relative influence of lowand high-latitude water masses in the southern southwest Pacific Ocean as global climate cooled and ice sheets expanded in Antarctica

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Summary

Introduction

The long-term evolution of climate through the early to middle Palaeogene (56–34 Ma) has been established from geochemical proxies and palaeontological data. After a prolonged period of maximum warmth during the Early Eocene Climatic Optimum centred around 53–51 Ma, longterm cooling was interrupted by the Middle Eocene Climatic Optimum (MECO), a ∼ 500 kyr period of warmth peaking ∼ 40 Ma that has been linked to an increase in atmospheric. Lipid biomarker-based climate proxies suggest the southwest Pacific sea surface temperatures were tropical during the MECO (28 ◦C) and continued to be warm throughout the late Eocene (24–26 ◦C), cooling only slightly across the Eocene–Oligocene transition (EOT, ∼ 22 ◦C) (Liu et al, 2009; Bijl et al, 2010)

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