The Impact of Tasman Gateway Opening on Early Paleogene Oceans and Climate

Lead Research Organisation: University of Birmingham
Department Name: Sch of Geography, Earth & Env Sciences

Abstract

The Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) in the Southern Ocean is the largest ocean current in the world; it circles Antarctica uninterrupted flowing east to west isolating the continent from the southward flow of warm subtropical waters. The ACC is a major driver of ocean overturning (i.e., thermohaline circulation) redistributing heat, salinity and nutrients around the world, thus playing a critical role in regulating global climate.

The ACC developed as Antarctic, Australia and South America continents separated creating an open marine passage in the Southern Hemisphere sometime between 34 and 50 million years ago. These gateway openings have been linked to driving the Earth's climate from a greenhouse state with high atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) levels and little or no ice sheets on Antarctica to a cooler 'icehouse' state with large ice sheets and lower atmospheric CO2 levels. The initiation of the ACC has been proposed as the mechanism for thermally isolating Antarctica, making it easier to grow large ice sheets on the continent and cooling the global ocean. However, more recent work suggests that declining atmospheric CO2 levels were the primary driver of global cooling. We currently lack highly resolved climatic and ocean circulation records from close to the opening gateways which spanning the critical transition, in particularly the poorly recovered early Eocene (~45-50 million years ago), making distinguishing between these scenarios challenging.

In September-November 2017, International Ocean Drilling Project Expedition 369 will recover brand new deep-sea sediments from the west of the Tasman Gateway (the final pinch-point in the development of the ACC), that span the interval during which the gateway opened and the ACC developed. I will measure the geochemical composition of calcareous shells from the marine microfossils foraminifera (single-celled organisms) found in deep-sea sediments. Foraminifera precipitate their shell from the seawater in which they live, and thus provide a record of the changing temperature, salinity and productivity at the seafloor. Foraminiferal shell chemistry can be used to trace bottom waters as each has a distinctive chemical signature dependent on the area where they were formed and their relative 'age', i.e., how long they have been isolated from surface waters. This signature can be detected and the extent of each water mass within ocean basins mapped, and the source regions identified. This established tool will constrain the source and intensity of deep-water formation throughout the focal interval and the relationship to ACC onset. Ultimately, this work will provide a greater understanding of how and when the ACC evolved, and its role in shaping ancient climate change. This project will also provide key data to fill spatial gaps for testing and configuration of numerical palaeoclimate models.

Planned Impact

My proposed research focuses on determining the link between tectonic and global environmental change providing a number of opportunities to engage and excite the public who are increasingly aware that the past potentially holds clues to constraining impacts of anthropogenic change as well as with an interest in how our planet has evolved. Further, this work is set against the exciting backdrop of deep-sea exploration with the potential to provide the public with behind-the-scene insights into the technological and physical challenges that this kind of work poses.

This work will directly benefit the following groups outside of academia:

(i) Members of the general public interested in climatic and environmental change - (1) Engage with the media via the University of Birmingham's (UoB) Public Relations Office to highlight high impact/novel outputs. (2) Deliver a public lecture on new insights from IODP Expedition 369 on our understanding of the origins, variability, and impacts of ocean circulation as part of UoB's annual Arts and Science Festival in 2019, (3) Contribute to an exhibition on past greenhouse worlds to be hosted in the newly re-developed Lapworth Museum of Geology at UoB (http://www.birmingham.ac.uk/facilities/lapworth-museum/index.aspx) in late 2018/early 2019 (June 2016-2017 - we had >50,000 visitors through the Lapworth Museum).

(ii) Skill development and inspiration for secondary school students - I am currently a STEM ambassador and will continue to work to inspire the next generation of scientists. In particular I will, in connection with the Learning Officer (Anna Crystal) at the Lapworth Museum, develop curriculum appropriate learning material and quiz sheets focusing on ocean circulation and past warm worlds integrated with our permanent "Dynamic Earth" gallery to expand our offerings for school visits. Activities can also be made stand-alone for distribution on the STEM or Lapworth Museum website.

(iii) Skills development for graduate student - The research technician will likely be a recent graduate of the MSc in Applied and Petroleum Micropalaeontology at the University of Birmingham. This research experience, including laboratory preparation, taxonomy and analytical techniques, will provide them with valuable transferable skills for future work in either research, a laboratory environment or in industrial micropalaeontology.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description [1] Contributed key stable (oxygen and carbon) isotope data to test competing early-middle Eocene astronomical age models, an important step towards generating a robust and stable timescale for the Cenozoic (in review in EPLS, Valenkamp et al).
[2] Determined that (relatively) continuous record of Eocene climate present at IODP Site U1514 containing all known hyperthermal events that will be important for constraining high latitude temperatures and causal mechanisms.
[3] Significant new national and international collaborations underway with IODP Exp. 369 participants resulting in expanding research portfolio and skill set.
Exploitation Route This work has formed the basic framework for a current NERC CENTA funded PhD student project
Multiple publications underway and invited talks (Universities of Exeter, Durham and Southampton) already resulting from work
Contributing to "Mysteries of the Deep: 50 years of scientific ocean drilling" temporary exhibition hosted at the Lapworth Museum of Geology (March-June 2019)
Will contribute to future community publications including DeepMIP simulations
Sectors Environment,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections

 
Description Mysteries of the Deep Exhibition at the Lapworth Museum of Geology 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Temporary exhibition on the Mysteries of the Deep Exhibition at the Lapworth Museum of Geology at the University of Birmingham from March-June 2019 including multiple public lectures and a public outreach day with >350 attendees.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019
URL https://www.mysteriesofthedeep.org/
 
Description Public lecture to Leicester Lit & Phil Soc (Geology Section) 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Invited public lecture with extensive question and answer session. Multiple undergraduate students contacted me regarding future research areas, careers and opportunities.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2020
URL https://www.charnia.org.uk/current%20winter%20programme/