Abstract

The Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM; ∼55.9 Ma) was a hyperthermal event associated with large carbon cycle perturbations, sustained global warming, and marine and terrestrial environmental changes. One possible trigger and/or source of the carbon release that initiated the PETM is the emplacement of the North Atlantic Igneous Province (NAIP). This study focuses on an expanded section of marine clays and diatomite on Fur Island in northern Denmark, where the entire PETM sequence has been identified by a negative ∼4.5‰ δ13CTOC excursion. This remarkably well-preserved section also contains >180 interbedded ash layers sourced from the NAIP, making it an ideal site for investigating the correlations between large-scale volcanism and environmental changes. This study provides a new and complete high-resolution TEX86-derived sea-surface temperature (SST) reconstruction over the entire PETM and the post-PETM section (up to about 54.6 Ma). The palaeothermometry record indicates an apparent short-lived cooling episode in the late Paleocene, followed by a pronounced temperature response to the PETM carbon cycle perturbations with a ∼10°C SST increase during the PETM onset (up to ∼33°C). Extreme SSTs fall shortly after the PETM onset, and continue to decrease during the PETM body and recovery, down to anomalously cool SSTs post-PETM (∼11–23°C). Both phases of potential cooling coincide with proxies of active NAIP volcanism, suggesting a causal connection, although several overprinting non-thermal factors complicate interpretations of the TEX86 values. Indices of effusive and explosive NAIP volcanism are largely absent from the Danish stratigraphy during the PETM body, though a re-emergence toward the end of the PETM suggest NAIP volcanism might have played a role in the PETM termination in the North Sea. This new SST record completes the previous fragmented view of climate changes at this globally important PETM site, and indicates large temperature variations in the North Sea during the earliest Eocene that are possibly linked to NAIP volcanism.

Highlights

  • The Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) was an extreme hyperthermal event that punctuated the already greenhouse climate of the early Cenozoic (Zachos et al, 2010)

  • By combining a detailed record of δ13CTOC and TEX86 sea surface temperatures (SSTs) estimates in conjunction with volcanic proxies, we aim to evaluate the link between the palaeotemperature record and North Atlantic Igneous Province (NAIP) volcanism in the North Sea basin and expand the global temperature dataset during the PETM

  • While the large potential for TEX86 bias during the first stage make validity of this cooling episode somewhat speculative, the potential TEX86 bias decrease substantially suggesting the latest stage may represent a genuine cooling episode. This latest robust stage of apparent cooling coincides with deposition of two major ash layers (SK1 and SK2) and significant Hg/total organic carbon (TOC) anomalies, suggesting that regional cooling from voluminous volcanism may be the cause of temporally depressed SSTs in the North Sea during the late Paleocene

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Summary

Introduction

The Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) was an extreme hyperthermal event that punctuated the already greenhouse climate of the early Cenozoic (Zachos et al, 2010). The formation of the NAIP is of significant scientific interest because it coincides with both the breakup of the northeast Atlantic Ocean and the extreme climate perturbations of the late Paleocene and early Eocene, including the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM; [Saunders 2016; Schmitz et al 2004; Storey, Duncan, and Swisher 2007; Storey, Duncan, well-preserved tephra layers from the NAIP are exposed subaerially in northwest Denmark (Figures 1 and 2) due to recent glaciotectonic activity [Pedersen 2008] These layers are all within the ash fraction with grain sizes

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