Norris, Richard D.; Bice, Karen L.; Magno, Elizabeth A.; Wilson, Paul A. (2002): Jiggling the tropical thermostat in the Cretaceous hothouse. Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States, Geology (Boulder), 30 (4), 299-302, georefid:2002-030917
Abstract:
Modern open-ocean sea-surface temperatures rarely exceed approximately 28-29 degrees C, and the same has been thought to represent a rough maximum for past tropical climates. However, new isotopic estimates from the uppermost Cenomanian in the tropical western North Atlantic suggest that mixed-layer temperatures reached approximately 33-34 degrees C (+ or -2 degrees C) during the middle Cretaceous hothouse. Uppermost Cenomanian tropical sea-surface temperatures may have been as much as 4-7 degrees C warmer than the highest modern mean annual temperatures. Such extreme conditions suggest that warm tropical oceans could have driven substantially intensified atmospheric heat transport near the Cenomanian-Turonian boundary. The tropical "thermostat" was set higher than today, challenging the hypothesis of tropical climate stability.
Coverage:
West: -54.2031 East: -54.2031 North: 9.2714 South: 9.2714
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