Abstract

AbstractChanges in ocean gateway configuration can induce basin‐scale rearrangements in ocean current characteristics. However, there is large uncertainty in the relative timing of the Oligocene/Miocene subsidence histories of the Greenland‐Scotland Ridge (GSR) and the Fram Strait (FS). By using a climate model, we investigate the temperature and salinity changes in response to the subsidence of these two key ocean gateways during early to middle Miocene. For a singular subsidence of the GSR, we detect warming and a salinity increase in the Nordic Seas and the Arctic Ocean. As convection sites shift to the north of Iceland, North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) is formed at cooler temperatures. The associated deep ocean cooling and upwelling of deep waters to the Southern Ocean surface can cause a cooling in the southern high latitudes. These characteristic responses to the GSR deepening are independent of the FS being shallow or deep. An isolated subsidence of the FS gateway for a deep GSR shows less pronounced warming and salinity increase in the Nordic Seas. Arctic temperatures remain unaltered, but a stronger salinity increase is detected, which further increases the density of NADW. The increase in salinity enhances the contribution of NADW to the abyssal ocean at the expense of the colder southern source water component. These relative changes largely counteract each other and cause a negligible warming in the upwelling regions of the Southern Ocean.

Highlights

  • Changes in ocean gateway geometry play a key role in global climate evolution throughout the Cenozoic (65 Myr ago to present) (Bartoli et al, 2005; Elsworth et al, 2017; Haug & Tiedemann, 1998; Stärz et al, 2017)

  • Using a set of four key model simulations (Table 1), we examine the isolated impacts of the Greenland‐Scotland Ridge (GSR) and Fram Strait (FS) subsidence by changing the sill depth, starting from a shallow depth toward a deep Miocene bathymetric configuration

  • Singular Effect of GSR Deepening for a Shallow FS (ΔGSR_FSshallow)

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Summary

Introduction

Changes in ocean gateway geometry play a key role in global climate evolution throughout the Cenozoic (65 Myr ago to present) (Bartoli et al, 2005; Elsworth et al, 2017; Haug & Tiedemann, 1998; Stärz et al, 2017). The continuous opening of the FS played a crucial role in ocean dynamics of the Arctic Ocean and in the evolution of the northern polar region (Ehlers & Jokat, 2013; Jakobsson et al, 2007; Jokat et al, 2016). This likely caused an intensification of the North Atlantic thermohaline circulation (Knies et al, 2014). The formation of North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) releases heat

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