Abrupt Climate Change and Transient Climates during the Paleogene: A Marine Perspective
暂无分享,去创建一个
J. Zachos | J. C. Walker | K. C. Lohmann | J C Zachos | K C Lohmann | J C Walker | S W Wise | S. W. Wise | S. Wise | S. Wise | James C. G. Walker
[1] J. Baldauf,et al. Evolution of Biosiliceous Sedimentation Patterns — Eocene Through Quaternary: Paleoceanographic Response to Polar Cooling , 1990 .
[2] N. Shackleton. Paleogene stable isotope events , 1986 .
[3] Rabinowitz,et al. History of the Walvis Ridge , 1984 .
[4] R. Oglesby. A GCM study of Antarctic glaciation , 1989 .
[5] W. Berger,et al. Abrupt climatic change - Evidence and implications , 1987 .
[6] T. C. Chamberlin. On a Possible Reversal of Deep-Sea Circulation and Its Influence on Geologic Climates , 1906, The Journal of Geology.
[7] G. P. Lohmann,et al. Paleocene-Eocene bathyal and abyssal benthic foraminifera from the Atlantic Ocean , 1983 .
[8] M. Aubry. Late Paleogene calcareous nannoplankton evolution: a tale of climatic deterioration , 1992 .
[9] J. Hayes,et al. Fractionation of carbon isotopes by phytoplankton and estimates of ancient CO2 levels. , 1992, Global biogeochemical cycles.
[10] L. Stott,et al. Proteus and Proto-Oceanus: Ancestral Paleogene Oceans as Revealed from Antarctic Stable Isotopic Results; ODP Leg 113 , 1990 .
[11] Ellen Thomas,et al. Late Eocene to Oligocene benthic foraminiferal isotopic record, Site 574, equatorial Pacific. , 1985 .
[12] K. Miller,et al. Paleocene to Eocene benthic foraminiferal isotopes and assemblages: Implications for deepwater circulation , 1992 .
[13] S. Savin. The History of the Earth's Surface Temperature During the Past 100 Million Years , 1977 .
[14] Syukuro Manabe,et al. Two Stable Equilibria of a Coupled Ocean-Atmosphere Model , 1988 .
[15] J. Erez. Modification of the oxygen-isotope record in deep-sea cores by Pleistocene dissolution cycles , 1979, Nature.
[16] J. A. Wolfe. Tertiary climates and floristic relationships at high latitudes in the northern hemisphere , 1980 .
[17] J. R. Bray. Neogene explosive volcanicity, temperature and glaciation , 1979, Nature.
[18] J. Francis. A 50-Million-Year-Old Fossil Forest from Strathcona Fiord, Ellesmere Island, Arctic Canada: Evidence for a Warm Polar Climate , 1988 .
[19] J. Kennett,et al. Cenozoic paleoglacial history of Antarctica recorded in Subantarctic deep-sea cores , 1971 .
[20] N. Shackleton. Carbon-13 in Uvigerina: Tropical Rainforest History and the Equatorial Pacific Carbonate Dissolution Cycles , 1977 .
[21] B. Huber,et al. Paleogene and Early Neogene Oceanography of the Southern Indian Ocean: Leg 119 Foraminifer Stable Isotope Results , 1991 .
[22] J. Toggweiler,et al. Glacial to Interglacial Changes in Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide: The Critical Role of Ocean Surface Water in High Latitudes , 2013 .
[23] M. Coffin. Subsidence of the Kerguelen Plateau: The Atlantis Concept , 1992 .
[24] W. Washington,et al. Atmospheric circulation during warm geologic periods: Is the equator-to-pole surface-temperature gradient the controlling factor? , 1982 .
[25] N. Shackleton,et al. Oxygen and Carbon Isotope Data from Leg 74 Foraminifers , 1984 .
[26] A. Mix,et al. Benthic foraminiferal δ18O in the ocean's temperature‐salinity‐density field: Constraints on Ice Age thermohaline circulation , 1991 .
[27] A. G. Fischer,et al. Secular Variations in the Pelagic Realm , 1977 .
[28] Gerald R. North,et al. The Small Ice Cap Instability in Diffusive Climate Models , 1984 .
[29] J. Kennett. Cenozoic evolution of Antarctic glaciation the Circum-Antarctic Ocean and their impact on global paleoceanography , 1977 .
[30] James D. Wright,et al. Unlocking the Ice House: Oligocene‐Miocene oxygen isotopes, eustasy, and margin erosion , 1991 .
[31] R. Poore,et al. Oxygen isotope ranking of late Eocene and Oligocene planktonic foraminifers: Implications for Oligocene sea-surface temperatures and global ice-volume , 1984 .
[32] S. Thompson,et al. Continental distribution as a forcing factor for global-scale temperature , 1984, Nature.
[33] E. Barron,et al. The Cenozoic ocean circulation based on ocean General Circulation Model results , 1991 .
[34] W. Broecker,et al. Does the ocean–atmosphere system have more than one stable mode of operation? , 1985, Nature.
[35] E. M. Kemp,et al. Influence of Continental Positions on Early Tertiary Climates , 1972, Nature.
[36] W. Berggren,et al. Plate tectonics and paleocirculation — Commotion in the ocean☆ , 1977 .
[37] D. I. Axelrod. An interpretation of Cretaceous and tertiary biota in polar regions , 1984 .
[38] W. Broecker. Ocean chemistry during glacial time , 1982 .
[39] N. Shackleton,et al. Atlantic Eocene planktonic foraminiferal paleohydrographic indicators and stable isotope paleoceanography , 1987 .
[40] D. Sandwell,et al. Evolution of the eastern Indian Ocean since the Late Cretaceous: Constraints from Geosat altimetry , 1989 .
[41] L. Keigwin. Palaeoceanographic change in the Pacific at the Eocene–Oligocene boundary , 1980, Nature.
[42] J. Hooker. 25. British Mammalian Paleocommunities across the Eocene-Oligocene Transition and Their Environmental Implications , 1992 .
[43] B. Huber. Paleogene and Early Neogene Planktonic Foraminifer Biostratigraphy of Sites 738 and 744, Kerguelen Plateau (Southern Indian Ocean) , 1991 .
[44] J. Baldauf. 14. Middle Eocene through Early Miocene Diatom Floral Turnover , 1992 .
[45] Ellen Thomas. Late Cretaceous through Neogene deep-sea benthic foraminifera(Maud Rise, Weddell Sea, Antarctica) , 1990 .
[46] D. Rea,et al. Paleocene/Eocene boundary changes in atmospheric and oceanic circulation: A Southern Hemisphere record , 1992 .
[47] J. Cartlidge,et al. Oceanographic and climatic implications of the Palaeocene carbon isotope maximum , 1992 .
[48] D. Prothero,et al. 2. Magnetostratigraphy and Geochronology of the Terrestrial Eocene-Oligocene Transition in North America , 1992 .
[49] S. Thompson,et al. The hydrologic cycle: A major variable during earth history , 1989 .
[50] W. Ehrmann. Implications of sediment composition on the southern Kerguelen Plateau for paleoclimate and depositional environment , 1991 .
[51] L. Sloan,et al. "Equable" climates during Earth history? , 1990 .
[52] S. Cande,et al. A new geomagnetic polarity time scale for the Late Cretaceous and Cenozoic , 1992 .
[53] N. Shackleton,et al. 48. THE EVOLUTION OF ANTARCTIC SURFACE WATERS DURING THE PALEOGENE: INFERENCES FROM THE STABLE ISOTOPIC COMPOSITION OF PLANKTONIC FORAMINIFERS, ODP LEG 113 1 , 1990 .
[54] J. H. Mercer,et al. Cenozoic marine sedimentation and ice-volume variation on the East Antarctic craton , 1984 .
[55] G. North,et al. Abrupt Climate Change and Extinction Events in Earth History , 1988, Science.
[56] A. Mackensen,et al. Isotope and trace element geochemistry of Eocene and Oligocene foraminifers from Site 748, Kerguelen Plateau , 1992 .
[57] B. Mcgowran. Silica burp in the Eocene ocean , 1989 .
[58] R. Ganapathy. Evidence for a major meteorite impact on the earth 34 million years ago: Implication on the origin of North American tektites and Eocene extinction , 1982 .
[59] J. A. Wolfe. 21. Climatic, Floristic, and Vegetational Changes near the Eocene/Oligocene Boundary in North America , 1992 .
[60] M. Rampino,et al. Geological Rhythms and Cometary Impacts , 1984, Science.
[61] D. Schnitker. Global paleoceanography and its deep water linkage to the Antarctic glaciation , 1980 .
[62] P. Gingerich. New Earliest Wasatchian Mammalian Fauna from the Eocene of Northwestern Wyoming: Composition and Diversity in a Rarely Sampled High-Floodplain Assemblage , 1989 .
[63] Claes Rooth,et al. Hydrology and ocean circulation , 1982 .
[64] J. Erez,et al. Experimental paleotemperature equation for planktonic foraminifera , 1983 .
[65] W. Berggren,et al. EOCENE-OLIGOCENE CLIMATIC AND BIOTIC EVOLUTION: AN OVERVIEW , 1992 .
[66] M. Hoffert. Climatic Change and Ocean Bottom Water Formation: Are We Missing Something? , 1990 .
[67] Tjeerd H. van Andel,et al. Mesozoic/cenozoic calcite compensation depth and the global distribution of calcareous sediments , 1975 .
[68] C. Veen,et al. Ice Sheets and Climate , 1984 .
[69] W. Berger,et al. The Deep-Sea Record: Major Steps in Cenozoic Ocean Evolution , 1981 .
[70] N. Shackleton,et al. Oxygen isotopic evidence for the development of the psychrosphere 38 Myr ago , 1976, Nature.
[71] R. Fairbanks,et al. Tertiary oxygen isotope synthesis, sea level history, and continental margin erosion , 1987 .
[72] L. Sloan,et al. Evidence from the Antarctic continental margin of Late Paleogene ice sheets: a manifestation of plate reorganization and synchronous changes in atmospheric circulation over the emerging Southern Ocean? , 1992 .
[73] K. Miller,et al. Eocene-Oligocene boundary: Biostratigraphic recognition and gradual paleoceanographic change at DSDP Site 549 , 1984 .
[74] G. Keller. Biochronology and paleoclimatic implications of Middle Eocene to Oligocene planktic foraminiferal faunas , 1983 .
[75] Kenneth G. Miller,et al. Development of Cenozoic Abyssal Circulation South of the Greenland-Scotland Ridge , 1983 .
[76] B. Corliss. Response of deep-sea benthonic Foraminifera to development of the psychrosphere near the Eocene/Oligocene boundary , 1979, Nature.
[77] M. Hambrey,et al. Cenozoic glacial record of the Prydz Bay continental shelf, East Antarctica , 1991 .
[78] R. Douglas,et al. Oxygen and Carbon Isotope Analyses of Tertiary and Cretaceous Microfossils from Shatsky Rise and Other Sites in the North Pacific Ocean , 1975 .
[79] P. Gingerich,et al. Correlation between isotope records in marine and continental carbon reservoirs near the Palaeocene/Eocene boundary , 1992, Nature.
[80] R. Fairbanks,et al. Oligocene to Miocene Carbon Isotope Cycles and Abyssal Circulation Changes , 2013 .
[81] K. Miller,et al. Abyssal circulation and benthic foraminiferal changes near the Paleocene/Eocene boundary , 1987 .
[82] H. Flohn. On Time Scales and Causes of Abrupt Paleoclimatic Events , 1979, Quaternary Research.
[83] A. Plint. Global eustacy and the Eocene sequence in the Hampshire Basin, England , 1988 .
[84] A. Mackensen,et al. Sedimentological evidence for the formation of an East Antarctic ice sheet in Eocene/Oligocene time , 1992 .
[85] L. Keigwin,et al. Stable isotopes in late middle Eocene to Oligocene foraminifera , 1986 .
[86] Ellen Thomas. 12. Middle Eocene-Late Oligocene Bathyal Benthic Foraminifera (Weddell Sea): Faunal Changes and Implications for Ocean Circulation , 1992 .
[87] G. Brass,et al. Warm saline bottom water in the ancient ocean , 1982, Nature.
[88] N. Shackleton,et al. The climate of the Eocene ocean , 1981, Journal of the Geological Society.
[89] L. Kump. Interpreting carbon-isotope excursions: Strangelove oceans , 1991 .
[90] H. Oberhaensli,et al. Isotopic Events at the Eocene/Oligocene Transition. A Review , 1986 .
[91] G. P. Lohmann,et al. Calcareous plankton paleobiogeographic evidence for major climatic fluctuations in the early Cenozoic Atlantic Ocean , 1977 .
[92] V. Spiess. Cenozoic Magnetostratigraphy of Leg 113 Drill Sites|Maud Rise|Weddell Sea|Antarctica , 1990 .
[93] J. Breza,et al. Lower Oligocene Ice-Rafted Debris on the Kerguelen Plateau: Evidence for East Antarctic Continental Glaciation , 1992 .
[94] U. Siegenthaler,et al. Rapid atmospheric CO2 variations and ocean circulation , 1984, Nature.
[95] N. Shackleton,et al. Paleotemperature History of the Cenozoic and the Initiation of Antarctic Glaciation: Oxygen and Carbon Isotope Analyses in DSDP Sites 277, 279 and 281 , 1975 .
[96] Guoping Wu,et al. Planktonic foraminifera: Differential dissolution and the Quaternary stable isotope Record in the west equatorial Pacific , 1989 .