Zachos, James C.; Shackleton, Nicholas J.; Revenaugh, Justin S.; Palike, Heiko; Flower, Benjamin P. (2001): The climatic consequences of a rare orbital anomaly at the Oligocene/Miocene boundary (23 Mya). Geological Society of America and Geological Society of London, International, In: Anonymous, Earth system processes; programmes with abstracts, 94, georefid:2003-038186

Abstract:
The late Oligocene to early Miocene (20-26 Ma) is characterized by a complex climate history that includes a stepped transition toward a cooler climate, intermittent partial glaciations of Antarctica, and a transient glaciation, Mi-1, at the Oligocene/Miocene (O/M) boundary. The Mi-1 event is characterized by an anomalous positive oxygen isotope excursion, the magnitude of which suggests the brief appearance of a full-scale ice-sheet on east Antarctica coupled with a few degrees of deep sea cooling. A recent breakthrough in extending the astronomical calibration back to approximately 30 Ma has provided a unique opportunity to compare the climatic events of the O/M transition relative to Earth's orbital variations. Here, we present an uninterrupted 5.5 My long high-fidelity chronology of late Oligocene-early Miocene climate and ocean carbon chemistry that is based on a composite isotope time series from two deep-sea cores (ODP Sites 926 and 929) collected in the western equatorial Atlantic. This unique isotope record provides a rare window into how the climate system responded to orbital forcing under boundary conditions significantly different from those of the recent past. Time-series analyses reveal climate variance concentrated at all Milankovitch frequencies, but with unusually strong power at the primary eccentricity band periods of 406, 125, and 95-ky. These cycles, which represent in part glacial advances and retreats of Antarctic ice-sheets, show significantly enhanced variability over a 1.6 My period (21.4-23.0 Ma) of suspected low greenhouse gas levels as inferred from the carbon isotope record. Perhaps the most unexpected finding is that of a rare orbital congruence between eccentricity and obliquity that precisely corresponds with the Mi-1 glaciation. This orbital anomaly involves approximately four consecutive cycles of low amplitude variance in obliquity (a node) during a period of low eccentricity. The net result is an extended period ( approximately 200 ky) of low seasonality orbits which allow for a step-like expansion of an Antarctic ice-sheet.
Coverage:
West: -43.4423 East: -42.5430 North: 5.5834 South: 3.4309
Relations:
Expedition: 154
Site: 154-926
Site: 154-929
Data access:
Provider: SEDIS Publication Catalogue
Data set link: http://sedis.iodp.org/pub-catalogue/index.php?id=2003-038186 (c.f. for more detailed metadata)
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