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Surface ocean cooling in the Eocene North Atlantic coincides with declining atmospheric CO2
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  • Gordon N. Inglis,
  • Rehemat Bhatia,
  • David Evans,
  • Jiang Zhu,
  • Wolfgang Müller,
  • David Mattey,
  • David Thornalley,
  • Richard Stockey,
  • Bridget Wade
Gordon N. Inglis
University of Southampton

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Rehemat Bhatia
University College London
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David Evans
University of Southampton
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Jiang Zhu
National Center for Atmospheric Research
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Wolfgang Müller
Unknown
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David Mattey
Royal Holloway University
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David Thornalley
University College London
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Richard Stockey
School of Ocean and Earth Science
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Bridget Wade
University College London
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Abstract

The Eocene (56–34 million years ago) is characterised by declining sea surface temperatures (SSTs) in the low latitudes (~4°C) and high southern latitudes (~8-11°C), in accord with decreasing CO2 estimates. However, in the mid-to-high northern latitudes there is no evidence for surface water cooling, suggesting thermal decoupling between northern and southern hemispheres and additional non-CO2 controls. To explore this further, we present a multi-proxy (Mg/Ca, δ18O, TEX86) SST record from the western North Atlantic (~36°N paleolatitude). Our data confirm a long-term decline in SSTs of ~5°C between the early (~53 Ma) and the middle (~42 Ma) Eocene, supporting declining atmospheric CO2 as the primary mechanism of Eocene cooling. However, from the middle Eocene onwards, North Atlantic zonal temperature gradients are decoupled, which we attribute to the incursion of warmer waters into the eastern North Atlantic and the inception of Northern Component Water across the early-middle Eocene transition.
26 Jul 2023Submitted to ESS Open Archive
01 Aug 2023Published in ESS Open Archive