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Early Pliocene paleoenvironment of the Sorsdal Formation, Vestfold Hills, based on diatom data
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posted on 2023-05-16, 13:04 authored by Whitehead, JM, Quilty, PG, Harwood, DM, Andrew McMinnAndrew McMinnComparison of diatom data from modern surface sediments in Prydz Bay and the Kerguelen Plateau with diatom assemblages from the Sørsdal Formation, Vestfold Hills, indicates that the climate was warmer than present during the early Pliocene (4.5-4.1 Ma). Extant, sea-ice associated diatoms are significantly less abundant throughout the Sørsdal Formation than in the modern Antarctic coastal zone. Extant diatoms in the Sørsdal Formation, including Stellarima stellaris, Thalassiosira oliverana, Fragilariopsis sublinearis, Pseudo-nitzschia turgiduloides and Eucampia antarctica var. recta, are consistent with annual sea-surface temperatures (SST) of between - 1.8 and 5.0°C. The presence of S. stellaris indicates that the summer SSTs were >3°C during some intervals. The absence of calcareous coccoliths and the silicoflagellate Dictyocha suggests that the upper limit for summer SST was <5°C. These data indicate that early Pliocene summer SST were between 1.6 and 3°C warmer than today. Abundant Chaetoceros cysts infer that stratified, open-water conditions were present during summer/spring. Ice sheet models suggest that warming of the magnitude evident in the Sørsdal Formation (≤3°C) should have resulted initially in increased snow accumulation and ice sheet growth. However, ice sheet growth was probably short-lived, as the long-term response to this warming in the early Pliocene resulted in a significant decrease in ice volume and deposition of the Sørsdal Formation. Other factors, such as increased basal-ice sliding and higher discharge (icebergs and melt-water), probably led to significantly elevated ablation rates from the Pliocene ice sheet, resulting in ice sheet retreat. © 2001 Elsevier Science B.V.
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Publication title
Marine MicropaleontologyVolume
41Issue
3-4Pagination
125-152ISSN
0377-8398Department/School
Institute for Marine and Antarctic StudiesPublisher
Elsevier Science BVPlace of publication
AmsterdamRepository Status
- Restricted
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