Dowsett, Harry (2007): Faunal re-evaluation of mid-Pliocene conditions in the western Equatorial Pacific. American Museum of Natural History, New York, NY, United States, Micropaleontology, 53 (6), 447-456, georefid:2008-109952

Abstract:
Mid-Pliocene low-latitude Pacific faunal (planktic foraminifer) sea surface temperature (SST) estimates are normally based upon the Modern Analog Technique (MAT). In the Eastern equatorial Pacific (EEP), where upwelling of cool water predominates, MAT can be used to discern both cooling and warming in Neogene records. SST today is approximately 30 degrees C in the western equatorial Pacific (WEP) warm pool the upper limit of the modern calibration data, and past warming above that level is difficult to assess using faunal methods. Mid-Pliocene fossil samples from the WEP have been analyzed using several variations of MAT with different outcomes and associated levels of confidence. While SST above approximately 30 degrees C in the WEP during the mid-Pliocene cannot be ruled out due to the limitations of the method, temperatures this warm seem unlikely. In addition to the mid-Pliocene, planktic foraminifer assemblages from the coretop, last glacial maximum, last interglacial and the penultimate glacial (Marine Isotope Stage 6) show striking similarity to each other which suggests little to no change in the region between times of global climate extremes. There is generally good agreement between the Mg/Ca paleothermometer and MAT derived faunal SST estimates. Both suggest stability of the WEP warm pool.
Coverage:
West: 121.1309 East: 159.2142 North: 25.3122 South: .1906
Relations:
Expedition: 124
Site: 124-769
Expedition: 130
Site: 130-806
Site: 130-807
Expedition: 58
Site: 58-445
Expedition: 62
Site: 62-463
Expedition: 89
Site: 89-586
Data access:
Provider: SEDIS Publication Catalogue
Data set link: http://sedis.iodp.org/pub-catalogue/index.php?id=2008-109952 (c.f. for more detailed metadata)
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