A review of Tertiary climate changes in southern South America and the Antarctic Peninsula. Part 1: Oceanic conditions
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Le Roux, Jacobus
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A review of Tertiary climate changes in southern South America and the Antarctic Peninsula. Part 1: Oceanic conditions
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Abstract
Oceanic conditions around southern South America and the Antarctic Peninsula have a major influence on climate
patterns in these subcontinents. During the Tertiary, changes in ocean water temperatures and currents
also strongly affected the continental climates and seem to have been controlled in turn by global tectonic
events and sea-level changes. During periods of accelerated sea-floor spreading, an increase in the midocean
ridge volumes and the outpouring of basaltic lavas caused a rise in sea-level and mean ocean temperature,
accompanied by the large-scale release of CO2. The precursor of the South Equatorial Current would
have crossed the East Pacific Rise twice before reaching the coast of southern South America, thus heating
up considerably during periods of ridge activity. The absence of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current before
the opening of the Drake Passage suggests that the current flowing north along the present western seaboard
of southern South American could have been temperate even during periods of ridge inactivity, which might
explain the generally warm temperatures recorded in the Southeast Pacific from the early Oligocene to middle
Miocene. Along the east coast of southern South America, water temperatures also fluctuated between
temperate-cool and warm until the early Miocene, when the first incursion of temperate-cold to cold Antarctic
waters is recorded. The cold Falkland/Malvinas Current initiated only after the middle Miocene. After the
opening of the Drake Passage, the South Equatorial Current would have joined the newly developed, cold
Antarctic Circumpolar Current on its way to Southern South America. During periods of increased sea-floor
spreading, it would have contributed heat to the Antarctic Circumpolar Current that caused a poleward
shift in climatic belts. However, periods of decreased sea-floor spreading would have been accompanied by
diminishing ridge volumes and older, cooler and denser oceanic plates, causing global sea-level falls. This
would have resulted in a narrowing of the Drake Passage, an intensification of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current
that enhanced the isolation of Antarctica from warmer northern waters, and increased glaciation on the
Antarctic Peninsula. Colder ocean surface waters would also have trapped more CO2, enhancing climate cooling
on the adjacent continents. During these periods the atmospheric belts shifted equatorward and increased
the latitudinal thermal gradient, leading to higher wind velocities and enhanced oceanic upwelling
along the western seaboard of Southern South America.
Patrocinador
This paper is based partly on the results of two successive Anillos
Projects: ARTG-04 (Conexiones Geológicas entre Antártica Occidental
y Patagonia desde el Paleozoico Tardío: Tectónica, Paleogeografía,
Biogeografía y Paleoclima), and ATC-105 (Evolución Geológica y
Paleontológica de las Cuencas de Magallanes y Larsen en el Mesozoico
y Cenozoico: Fuente de sus Detritos y Posibles Equivalencias), funded
by the World Bank, CONICYT and INACH.
Identifier
URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/125585
DOI: doi:10.1016/j.sedgeo.2011.12.014
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Sedimentary Geology 247–248 (2012) 1–20
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