Centennial to millennial variability of greenhouse climate across the mid-Cenomanian event

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Abstract

Centennial- to millennial-scale climate variations are often attributed to solar forcing or internal climate system variability, but recognition of such variations in the deep-time paleoclimate record is extremely rare. We present an exceptionally well-preserved, millimeterscale laminated marlstone from a succession of precession-driven limestone-marlstone couplets deposited in the Western Interior Seaway (North America) immediately preceding and during the Cretaceous mid-Cenomanian event (ca. 96.5 Ma). Sedimentological, geochemical, and micropaleontological data indicate that individual pairs of light-dark laminae record alternations in the extent of water-column mixing and oxygenation. Principal component analysis of X-ray fluorescence element counts and a grayscale scan of a continuous thin section through the marlstone reveal variations with 80-100 yr, 200-230 yr, 350-500 yr, -1650 yr, and 4843 yr periodicities. A substantial fraction of the data indicates an anoxic bottom water variation with a pronounced 10,784 yr cycle. The centennial to millennial variations are reminiscent of those found in Holocene total solar irradiance variability, and the 10,784 yr anoxia cycle may be a manifestation of semi-precession-influenced Tethyan oxygen minimum zone waters entering the seaway.

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Ma, C., Hinnov, L. A., Eldrett, J. S., Meyers, S. R., Bergman, S. C., Minisini, D., & Lutz, B. (2022). Centennial to millennial variability of greenhouse climate across the mid-Cenomanian event. Geology, 50(2), 227–231. https://doi.org/10.1130/G48734.1

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