Abstract

Abstract. The Paleogene sedimentary records from southern China hold important clues to the impacts of the Cenozoic climate changes on low latitudes. However, although there are extensive Paleogene terrestrial archives and some contain abundant fossils in this region, few are accurately dated or have a temporal resolution adequate to decipher climate changes. Here, we present a detailed stratigraphic and paleomagnetic study of a fossiliferous late Paleogene succession in the Maoming Basin, Guangdong Province. The succession consists of oil shale of the Youganwo Formation (Fm) in the lower part and the overlying sandstone-dominated Huangniuling Fm in the upper part. Fossil records indicate that the age of the succession possibly spans the late Eocene to the Oligocene. Both the Youganwo Fm and the overlying Huangniuling Fm exhibit striking sedimentary rhythms, and spectral analysis of the depth series of magnetic susceptibility of the Youganwo Fm reveals dominant sedimentary cycles at orbital frequency bands. The transition from the Youganwo oil shale to the overlying Huangniuling sandstones is conformable and represents a major depositional environmental change from a lacustrine to a deltaic environment. Integrating the magnetostratigraphic, lithologic, and fossil data allows establishing a substantially refined chronostratigraphic framework that places the major depositional environmental change at 33.88 Ma, coinciding with the Eocene–Oligocene climate transition (EOT) at ∼ 33.7 to ∼ 33.9 Ma. We suggest that the transition from a lacustrine to deltaic environment in the Maoming Basin represents terrestrial responses to the EOT and indicates prevailing drying conditions in low-latitude regions during the global cooling at EOT.

Highlights

  • The late Paleogene witnessed one of the most prominent climatic changes in the Cenozoic, a transition from greenhouse to icehouse world

  • We present a detailed stratigraphic and paleomagnetic study on the fossiliferous Eocene to Oligocene succession in the Maoming Basin of Guangdong Province, southern China, to construct a new chronostratigraphic framework that is based on an integrated litho, bio, magneto, and cyclostratigraphy

  • The lithology difference between the Youganwo Fm in the lower part and the Huangniuling Fm in the upper part of the section is indicated by the distinct color contrast (Fig. 2c–e)

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Summary

Introduction

The late Paleogene witnessed one of the most prominent climatic changes in the Cenozoic, a transition from greenhouse to icehouse world. The transition climaxed at the Eocene– Oligocene boundary when marine sediments registered a large, widespread, and rapid cooling in oceans (e.g., Zachos et al, 2001; Liu et al, 2009; Bohaty et al, 2012), which was accompanied by a sudden deepening of the carbonate compensation depth (CCD) by ∼ 1.2 km (Pälike et al, 2012) in oceans and a calamity in the marine community that gave rise to the largest marine mass extinction since the end of Cretaceous (e.g., Prothero, 1994; Pearson et al, 2008; Cotton and Pearson, 2011). Li et al.: Terrestrial responses of low-latitude Asia to the Eocene–Oligocene climate transition

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