Abstract
The Middle Miocene is characterized by a long-term increase in the
oxygen isotopes of benthic foraminifera (δ18Obenthic). However, it is
unclear to what extent this increase reflects changes in seawater
isotopes or deep water temperature. We present a high-resolution
alkenone hydrogen isotope (δ2HC37) record of the middle Miocene from a
core taken at the upper slope edge (about 409 m water depth) of the
Porcupine Basin continental margin in the eastern North Atlantic Ocean,
Site U1318 of the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program. The δ2HC37 values
vary between -174 to -200‰ with an average of -191 ±5‰, similar to
modern open-ocean values. Importantly, it does not show a long-term
increase in surface seawater isotopes (δ2HSSW) during the Middle Miocene
Climate Transition. Indeed, when δ18Obenthic is corrected for subsurface
temperature, the average bottom seawater oxygen isotopes of 0.9 ±0.2‰
also show no significant increase. When the latter record is translated
into hydrogen isotopes of bottom seawater using the modern open-ocean
waterline, it shows an average value of 5.8 ±1.5‰ similar to the δ2HSSW
of 5.2 ±3.1‰ derived from δ2HC37 suggesting relatively small difference
between bottom and surface waters. Our results suggest a stable global
surface seawater isotope evolution during the Middle Miocene, coupled
with a long-term decrease in bottom water temperature.