Development of latitudinal thermal gradients during the Oligocene: oxygen-isotope evidence from the southwest Pacific.

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Abstract

The late Eocene through earliest Miocene stable-isotope composition of southwest Pacific microfossils has been examined in a traverse of high-quality sedimentary sequences ranging from subantarctic (DSDP Site 277) through temperate regions (DSDP Sites 592 and 593). Changes in oxygen-isotope values, measured in benthic and planktonic foraminifers, document the Oligocene development and strengthening of latitudinal thermal zonation from water masses with broad temperature gradients during the Eocene to the steeper gradients and more distinct latitudinally distributed surface water-mass belts of the Neogene. The oxygen-isotope records can be divided into three intervals: late Eocene, early Oligocene, and middle to late Oligocene. Each interval represents a successive stage in the evolution of the latitudinal thermal gradients between subantarctic and temperate regions in the Southern Hemisphere. The data presented in this chapter document the progressive increase of latitudinal temperature gradients from the late Eocene through the late Oligocene. This pattern of increasing isotopic offset between latitudinally distributed southwest Pacific sites is linked to the establishment and strengthening of the Circum-Antarctic Current, previously considered to have developed during the middle to late Oligocene. The intensification of this current system progressively decoupled the warm subtropical gyres from cool polar circulation, in turn leading to increased Antarctic glaciation. -from Authors

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Murphy, M. G., & Mennett, J. P. (1986). Development of latitudinal thermal gradients during the Oligocene: oxygen-isotope evidence from the southwest Pacific. Initial Reports DSDP, Leg 90, Noumea, New Caledonia to Wellington, New Zealand. Part 2, 1347–1360. https://doi.org/10.2973/dsdp.proc.90.140.1986

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