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Effects of paleogeographic changes and CO₂ variability on northern mid-latitudinal temperature gradients in the Cretaceous

Earth Sciences

Effects of paleogeographic changes and CO₂ variability on northern mid-latitudinal temperature gradients in the Cretaceous

K. Gianchandani, S. Maor, et al.

Explore how changes in paleogeography during the Cretaceous period influenced sea surface temperatures, suggesting a greater impact than atmospheric CO₂ levels. This intriguing research was conducted by Kaushal Gianchandani, Sagi Maor, Ori Adam, Alexander Farnsworth, Hezi Gildor, Daniel J. Lunt, and Nathan Paldor.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
The Cretaceous 'greenhouse' period (-145 to -66 million years ago, Ma) in Earth's history is relatively well documented by multiple paleoproxy records, which indicate that the meridional sea surface temperature (SST) gradient increased (non-monotonically) from the Valanginian (-135 Ma) to the Maastrichtian (-68 Ma). Changes in atmospheric CO₂ concentration, solar constant, and paleogeography are the primary drivers of variations in the spatio-temporal distribution of SST. However, the particular contribution of each of these drivers (and their underlying mechanisms) to changes in the SST distribution remains poorly understood. Here we use data from a suite of paleoclimate simulations to compare the relative effects of atmospheric CO₂ variability and paleogeographic changes on mid-latitudinal SST gradient through the Cretaceous. Further, we use a fundamental model of wind-driven ocean gyres to quantify how changes in the Northern Hemisphere paleogeography weaken the circulation in subtropical ocean gyres, leading to an increase in extratropical SSTs.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Aug 25, 2023
Authors
Kaushal Gianchandani, Sagi Maor, Ori Adam, Alexander Farnsworth, Hezi Gildor, Daniel J. Lunt, Nathan Paldor
Tags
Cretaceous period
sea surface temperature
paleoclimate simulations
atmospheric CO₂
paleogeographic changes
ocean gyres
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