Mid-Cretaceous (Albian-Santonian) sea surface temperature record of the tropical Atlantic Ocean
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Abstract
Paleoclimate records of geologic time periods characterized by extreme global warmth such as the mid-Cretaceous are important for a better understanding of the Earth's climate system operating in an exceptionally warm mode. Here we applied an organic geochemical proxy (TEX86) on organic matter-rich Albian-Santonian sediments, recovered from Ocean Drilling Program Leg 207 Sites 1258 and 1259 on Demerara Rise, to reconstruct sea surface temperatures (SSTs) in the western equatorial Atlantic. Preceded by a stepwise Cenomanian warming trend (∼31-35 °C), the onset of the Cretaceous thermal maximum coincided here with the Cenomanian-Turonian boundary event. Once established, this extreme warm climate regime, characterized by averaged tropical SSTs close to 35 °C, lasted up to the Turonian-Coniacian transition. Two pronounced cooler intervals (∼2-3 °C) interrupt this otherwise remarkably stable record, providing the first δ18O independent evidence for middle Turonian cooling that previously has been attributed to glacioeustatic sea-level lowering. Coniacian SSTs decline stepwise, reaching a minimum in the Santonian (∼32-33 °C), where cooling is most pronounced, presumably concomitant with the first progressive opening of a deep-water passage through the equatorial Atlantic gateway.
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Publication:
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Geology
Pub Date:
- October 2007 DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 2007Geo....35..919F Keywords:
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- Cretaceous thermal maximum;
- paleotropical sea surface temperatures;
- TEX<SUB>86</SUB>;
- Demerara Rise;
- Ocean Drilling Program Leg 207