Abstract
The Piacenzian (Late Pliocene) represents a natural laboratory within
which frequency and magnitude of environmental changes during a period
of past global warmth can be analyzed, climate models can be tested, and
results can be placed in a context to better prepare for future change.
We focus on the North Atlantic and both generate new and incorporate
existing faunal assemblage and alkenone data from DSDP Sites 552 and
606, ODP Sites 662, 981, 982, and 999, and IODP Sites 1307, 1308 and
1313. In addition, cores and outcrop material containing Piacenzian
sediments from the Atlantic Coastal Plain of Virginia, USA, are
included. These data allow us to characterize regional changes in
temperature, salinity, upwelling, productivity, and diversity,
associated with climate transitions, and make nuanced reconstructions of
mid-Piacenzian conditions within a high-resolution temporal framework
between ~3.40 and ~3.15 Ma, inclusive of
Marine Isotope Stages M2 through KM5. Our results indicate the slope of
the North Atlantic sea surface temperature gradient is a robust feature
of the Late Pliocene and we confirm a temperature anomaly (Pliocene
minus pre-industrial) little to no change at the equator to
>6° C near 60° North, during Marine Isotope Stage (MIS)
KM5c (3.21 Ma – 3.20 Ma). The M2-M1 transition is accompanied by
warming, rapid sea-level rise, reorganization of planktonic foraminifer
assemblages, decreases in productivity and increase in zooplankton
diversity. Abundance changes in stenohaline taxa document repeated
freshening of the Caribbean by low latitude Pacific water associated
with brief re-openings of the Central American Seaway. The Gulf Stream
– North Atlantic Drift migrated to a more northerly position during
both the M2-M1 and KM6-KM5 transitions. Preliminary comparison of these
results to climate simulations produced by the second phase of the
Pliocene Model Inter-comparison Project (PlioMIP2) indicates model
output and reconstructed environmental data are in closer agreement than
previous data-model comparisons. We attribute this to a combination of
improved Pliocene Research, Interpretation and Synoptic Mapping (PRISM4)
boundary conditions, and the refined stratigraphic window used for
verification, compared to PRISM3.