Seawater Lead Isotopes Record Early Miocene to Modern Circulation Dynamics in the Pacific Sector of the Southern Ocean
The Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) is Earth's largest current flowing around Antarctica at all depths and connecting major ocean basins, thus representing an important component of Earth's climate. However, the timing and key controls determining ACC flow path and its strength as a function of past climatic boundary conditions that ultimately resulted in its modern configuration remain unclear due to major uncertainties in paleoceanographic and tectonic reconstructions. Here we present a unique high-resolution laser ablation-derived late Cenozoic seawater lead isotope record obtained from a hydrogenetic ferromanganese crust from the Pacific sector of the Southern Ocean. Our Pb isotope data reveal that the ACC has experienced five stable circulation states since the early Miocene which were separated by four major transitions observed at 17.5-14.6, 12, 10 and 5 Ma. We suggest that the relatively abrupt transitions between ACC circulation state were mainly induced by tectonic changes, whereas the impact of climatic changes was of secondary importance. According to our data the modern ACC configuration formed 5 million years ago, likely in response to the closure of the Panama Seaway. Since the Drake Passage (DP) has already been an open seaway since at least the late Miocene, our results demonstrate that DP opening was not the only factor affecting past ACC circulation. Our data also show that changes in the latitudinal position of the ACC were linked to the middle Miocene waxing and waning of the Antarctic ice sheets, which emphasizes the ACC's critical role as a key control of Antarctic glaciation.
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Authors: Huang, Huang, Gutjar, Marcus, Song, Zhaoyang, Fietzke, Jan, Frank, Martin, Kuhn, Gerhard, Hillenbrand, Claus-Dieter ORCID record for Claus-Dieter Hillenbrand, Christl, Marcus, Garbe-Schönberg, Dieter, Goepfert, Tyler, Eisenhauer, Anton