Abstract

AbstractThe global climate of the early Oligocene was characterized by initiated Antarctic glaciation and meridional overturning circulation, which then led to profound eutrophication in the upper ocean. Generating a high‐resolution coccolith record helps to understand the responses of marine phytoplankton to the newly established environment. Using highly resolved (∼6 kyr time‐resolution) marine sediment samples from Deep Sea Drilling Project Site 522 in the South Atlantic Ocean, we conducted a comprehensive morphological study on coccoliths from the genera Reticulofenestra, Dictyococcites, and Coccolithus, which dominated the study interval between ∼33.1 and 32.8 Ma. Our results showed that the size variations of the three measured genera were significantly correlated (p < 0.01) with each other, indicating homogeneous responses to the environmental changes. Moreover, spectrum analysis on integrated morphologic data of all measured coccoliths showed distinct obliquity (∼40‐kyr) and precession (∼23‐kyr and ∼18‐kyr) cycles. We suggest that these variations were mainly driven by temperate, short‐term ecological fluctuations, which periodically altered the nutrient conditions in the common living habitats of the studied coccolithophores. We proposed two tentative explanations focusing on the obliquity signal. First, the cyclic variation could result from obliquity‐modulated changes in ice volume and variations in ocean circulation intensity, which influenced nutrient export from deep waters to the upper ocean. Alternatively, the changes in coccolith size may indicate the strength of seasonality that influenced upper ocean mixing on the west coast of South Africa.

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