AbstractCrossing a key atmospheric CO2 threshold triggered a fundamental global climate reorganisation ~34 million years ago (Ma) establishing permanent Antarctic ice sheets. Curiously, a more dramatic CO2 decline (~800–400 ppm by the Early Oligocene(~27 Ma)), postdates initial ice sheet expansion but the mechanisms driving this later, rapid drop in atmospheric carbon during the early Oligocene remains elusive and controversial. Here we use marine seismic reflection and borehole data to reveal an unprecedented accumulation of early Oligocene strata (up to 2.2 km thick over 1500 × 500 km) with a major biogenic component in the Australian Southern Ocean. High-resolution ocean simulations demonstrate that a tectonically-driven, one-off reorgan...
Decades ago, the analysis of ancient air – trapped deep inside of Antarctic glaciers – revealed an a...
Antarctic ice sheet and Southern Ocean paleoceanographic configurations during the late Oligocene ar...
Over the last 2.5 million years the Earth has regularly cycled between cold glacial and warm intergl...
Ocean modelling results of "Southern Ocean biogenic blooms freezing-in Oligocene colder climates" by...
The formation of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) is critical for the evolution of the global...
Understanding the stability of the early Antarctic ice cap in the geological past is of societal int...
The Pleistocene epoch was characterized by orbitally-forced climate oscillations between warm stages...
Falling atmospheric CO2 levels led to cooling through the Eocene and the expansion of Antarctic ice ...
Global ocean circulation is strongly controlled by the formation and closing of oceanic basins and g...
About 34 million years ago, Earth's climate cooled and an ice sheet formed on Antarctica as atmosphe...
Millennial-scale climate changes during the last glacial period and deglaciation were accompanied by...
The late Oligocene experienced atmospheric concentrations of CO2 between 400 and 750 ppm, which are ...
Declining atmospheric CO2 concentrations are considered the primary driver for the Cenozoic Greenhou...
Continental-scale expansion of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet during the Eocene-Oligocene Transition (...
Continental-scale expansion of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet during the Eocene-Oligocene Transition (...
Decades ago, the analysis of ancient air – trapped deep inside of Antarctic glaciers – revealed an a...
Antarctic ice sheet and Southern Ocean paleoceanographic configurations during the late Oligocene ar...
Over the last 2.5 million years the Earth has regularly cycled between cold glacial and warm intergl...
Ocean modelling results of "Southern Ocean biogenic blooms freezing-in Oligocene colder climates" by...
The formation of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) is critical for the evolution of the global...
Understanding the stability of the early Antarctic ice cap in the geological past is of societal int...
The Pleistocene epoch was characterized by orbitally-forced climate oscillations between warm stages...
Falling atmospheric CO2 levels led to cooling through the Eocene and the expansion of Antarctic ice ...
Global ocean circulation is strongly controlled by the formation and closing of oceanic basins and g...
About 34 million years ago, Earth's climate cooled and an ice sheet formed on Antarctica as atmosphe...
Millennial-scale climate changes during the last glacial period and deglaciation were accompanied by...
The late Oligocene experienced atmospheric concentrations of CO2 between 400 and 750 ppm, which are ...
Declining atmospheric CO2 concentrations are considered the primary driver for the Cenozoic Greenhou...
Continental-scale expansion of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet during the Eocene-Oligocene Transition (...
Continental-scale expansion of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet during the Eocene-Oligocene Transition (...
Decades ago, the analysis of ancient air – trapped deep inside of Antarctic glaciers – revealed an a...
Antarctic ice sheet and Southern Ocean paleoceanographic configurations during the late Oligocene ar...
Over the last 2.5 million years the Earth has regularly cycled between cold glacial and warm intergl...