Publications by authors named "F Peterse"

Alongside the Chicxulub meteorite impact, Deccan volcanism is considered a primary trigger for the Cretaceous-Paleogene (K-Pg) mass extinction. Models suggest that volcanic outgassing of carbon and sulfur-potent environmental stressors-drove global temperature change, but the relative timing, duration, and magnitude of such change remains uncertain. Here, we use the organic paleothermometer MBT' and the carbon-isotope composition of two K-Pg-spanning lignites from the western Unites States, to test models of volcanogenic air temperature change in the ~100 kyr before the mass extinction.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study analyzes Early Eocene Arctic climate dynamics using sediments to understand climate patterns without ice, focusing on orbital variability that influenced climate changes during that period.
  • - High-resolution records of lipid biomarkers and pollen indicate that temperature changes were linked to orbital cycles, with significant sea surface temperature increases tied to higher precipitation and nutrient supply in the Arctic Basin.
  • - The research suggests that Arctic climate responses during the Early Eocene were significantly influenced by local insolation, showing stronger temperature variability compared to the deep ocean and tropics, even in the absence of ice-albedo feedbacks.
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Numerous proxy reconstructions have provided general insight into late Quaternary East Asian Monsoon variability. However, challenges persist in precisely assessing absolute temperature impacts on proxy variations. Here, we use two independent paleothermometers, based on bacterial membrane lipids and clumped isotopes of snail shells, in the same section of the western Chinese Loess Plateau to establish a robust land surface temperature record spanning the past approximately 21,000 years.

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Rationale: Embedding resins are widely used to fix carbonates for high-precision sample preparation and high-resolution sampling. However, these embedding materials are difficult to remove after sample preparation and are known to affect the accuracy of carbonate stable isotope analyses. Nevertheless, their impact on clumped isotope analysis, which is particularly sensitive to contamination artifacts, has so far not been tested.

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Anthropogenic climate change is predicted to severely impact the global hydrological cycle, particularly in tropical regions where agriculture-based economies depend on monsoon rainfall. In the Horn of Africa, more frequent drought conditions in recent decades contrast with climate models projecting precipitation to increase with rising temperature. Here we use organic geochemical climate-proxy data from the sediment record of Lake Chala (Kenya and Tanzania) to probe the stability of the link between hydroclimate and temperature over approximately the past 75,000 years, hence encompassing a sufficiently wide range of temperatures to test the 'dry gets drier, wet gets wetter' paradigm of anthropogenic climate change in the time domain.

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