Tropical Sea Surface Temperatures following the Middle Miocene Climate
Transition from Laser-Ablation ICP-MS analysis of glassy foraminifera
Abstract
The mid-to-late Miocene is proposed as a key interval in the transition
of the Earth’s climate state towards that of the modern-day. However, it
remains a poorly understood interval in the evolution of Cenozoic
climate, and the sparse proxy-based climate reconstructions are
associated with large uncertainties. In particular, tropical sea surface
temperature (SST) estimates largely rely on the unsaturated alkenone
Uk37 proxy, which fails to record temperatures higher than 29˚C, the
TEX86 proxy which has challenges around its calibration, and Mg/Ca
ratios of poorly preserved foraminifera. We reconstruct robust,
absolute, SSTs between 13.5 Ma and 9.5 Ma from the South West Indian
Ocean (paleolatitude ~5.5˚S) using Laser-Ablation (LA-)
ICP-MS microanalysis of glassy planktic foraminiferal Mg/Ca. Employing
this microanalytical technique, and stringent screening criteria,
permits the reconstruction of paleotemperatures using foraminifera which
although glassy, are contaminated by authigenic coatings. Our absolute
estimates of 24-31⁰C suggest that SST in the tropical Indian Ocean was
relatively constant between 13.5 and 9.5 Ma, similar to those
reconstructed from the tropics using the Uk37 alkenone proxy. This
finding suggests an interval of enhanced polar amplification between 10
and 7.5 Ma, immediately prior to the global late Miocene Cooling.