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Transient Middle Eocene Atmospheric CO2 and Temperature Variations.

Bijl PK, Houben AJ, Schouten S, Bohaty SM, Sluijs A, Reichart GJ, Sinninghe Damsté JS, Brinkhuis H

Science. 2010 Nov 5; 330(6005): 819-21.


Abstract

The long-term warmth of the Eocene (~56 to 34 million years ago) is commonly associated with elevated partial pressure of atmospheric carbon dioxide (pCO(2)). However, a direct relationship between the two has not been established for short-term climate perturbations. We reconstructed changes in both pCO(2) and temperature over an episode of transient global warming called the Middle Eocene Climatic Optimum (MECO; ~40 million years ago). Organic molecular paleothermometry indicates a warming of southwest Pacific sea surface temperatures (SSTs) by 3° to 6°C. Reconstructions of pCO(2) indicate a concomitant increase by a factor of 2 to 3. The marked consistency between SST and pCO(2) trends during the MECO suggests that elevated pCO(2) played a major role in global warming during the MECO.

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  • Xinning Zhang (Caltech) is following this article in Caltech Geobiology : Suggested Papers for Discussion
    November 10, 2010
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