Surface ocean cooling in the Eocene North Atlantic coincides with
declining atmospheric CO2
Abstract
The Eocene (56–34 million years ago) is characterised by declining sea
surface temperatures (SSTs) in the low latitudes (~4°C)
and high southern latitudes (~8-11°C), in accord with
decreasing CO2 estimates. However, in the mid-to-high northern latitudes
there is no evidence for surface water cooling, suggesting thermal
decoupling between northern and southern hemispheres and additional
non-CO2 controls. To explore this further, we present a multi-proxy
(Mg/Ca, δ18O, TEX86) SST record from the western North Atlantic
(~36°N paleolatitude). Our data confirm a long-term
decline in SSTs of ~5°C between the early
(~53 Ma) and the middle (~42 Ma) Eocene,
supporting declining atmospheric CO2 as the primary mechanism of Eocene
cooling. However, from the middle Eocene onwards, North Atlantic zonal
temperature gradients are decoupled, which we attribute to the incursion
of warmer waters into the eastern North Atlantic and the inception of
Northern Component Water across the early-middle Eocene transition.