Publications by authors named "Adriana Dutkiewicz"

Article Synopsis
  • Astronomical forces, particularly Milankovitch cycles, significantly influence Earth's climate and are recorded in stratigraphy, though long-term cycles have been less studied.
  • Recent spectral analysis of Cenozoic deep-sea hiatuses has unveiled a 2.4 million-year eccentricity signal, indicating that these cycles may enhance deep-water circulation and erosion during certain orbital configurations.
  • Notably, disturbances in this cyclicity during the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum suggest a possible link between this climate event and chaotic changes in the Solar System.
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Concealed deep beneath the oceans is a carbon conveyor belt, propelled by plate tectonics. Our understanding of its modern functioning is underpinned by direct observations, but its variability through time has been poorly quantified. Here we reconstruct oceanic plate carbon reservoirs and track the fate of subducted carbon using thermodynamic modelling.

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Atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO) data for the last 420 million years (My) show long-term fluctuations related to supercontinent cycles as well as shorter cycles at 26 to 32 My whose origin is unknown. Periodicities of 26 to 30 My occur in diverse geological phenomena including mass extinctions, flood basalt volcanism, ocean anoxic events, deposition of massive evaporites, sequence boundaries, and orogenic events and have previously been linked to an extraterrestrial mechanism. The vast oceanic crustal carbon reservoir is an alternative potential driving force of climate fluctuations at these time scales, with hydrothermal crustal carbon uptake occurring mostly in young crust with a strong dependence on ocean bottom water temperature.

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The pace of scientific discovery is being transformed by the availability of 'big data' and open access, open source software tools. These innovations open up new avenues for how scientists communicate and share data and ideas with each other and with the general public. Here, we describe our efforts to bring to life our studies of the Earth system, both at present day and through deep geological time.

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