Carpenter, Raymond J.; Jordan, Gregory J.; Macphail, Mike K.; Hill, Robert S. (2012): Near-tropical early Eocene terrestrial temperatures at the Australo-Antarctic margin, western Tasmania. Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States, Geology (Boulder), 40 (3), 267-270, georefid:2012-041683

Abstract:
A worldwide greenhouse warm climate prevailed in the Early Eocene, and nowhere was warming more dramatic than at high latitudes. Sea-surface temperatures of approximately 34 degrees C have been estimated for a site at paleolatitude 65 degrees S on the East Tasman Plateau of the southwest Pacific Ocean, but these estimates require independent validation, including from terrestrial proxies. Here we determine a near-tropical terrestrial mean annual temperature estimate of approximately 24 degrees C at sea level for an Early Eocene site in Tasmania, Australia, using three proxies based on well-dated estuarine plant fossils. This estimate is lower than the nearby sea estimates to the east, but similarly suggests that, as in the southwest Pacific, Early Eocene climates in the eastern Australo-Antarctic region were warmer than inferred elsewhere at high latitudes, including on the Antarctic Peninsula. Such data are essential for improving our understanding of climatic and biotic evolution in the Southern Hemisphere.
Coverage:
West: 145.2100 East: 149.5600 North: -42.1700 South: -43.5800
Relations:
Expedition: 189
Site: 189-1172
Supplemental Information:
Includes appendix; with GSA Data Repository Item 2012067
Data access:
Provider: SEDIS Publication Catalogue
Data set link: http://sedis.iodp.org/pub-catalogue/index.php?id=10.1130/G32584.1 (c.f. for more detailed metadata)
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