Publications by authors named "James S Eldrett"

Article Synopsis
  • Several studies suggest the formation of North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) may have started during the warm Eocene, yet data on Eocene surface conditions in potential deep water formation areas are limited.
  • Researchers analyzed sediments from the Labrador Sea to evaluate whether middle Eocene ocean conditions could support deep water formation, revealing a long-term decrease in sea surface temperatures (SST) combined with warming events tied to climatic shifts.
  • The findings indicate that the surface ocean in the middle Eocene Labrador Sea was warm, fresh, and highly variable, suggesting that these conditions were not suitable for NADW formation at that time, implying either NADW did not form then or originated elsewhere.
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A profound global climate shift took place at the Eocene-Oligocene transition ( approximately 33.5 million years ago) when Cretaceous/early Palaeogene greenhouse conditions gave way to icehouse conditions. During this interval, changes in the Earth's orbit and a long-term drop in atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations resulted in both the growth of Antarctic ice sheets to approximately their modern size and the appearance of Northern Hemisphere glacial ice.

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The Eocene and Oligocene epochs (approximately 55 to 23 million years ago) comprise a critical phase in Earth history. An array of geological records supported by climate modelling indicates a profound shift in global climate during this interval, from a state that was largely free of polar ice caps to one in which ice sheets on Antarctica approached their modern size. However, the early glaciation history of the Northern Hemisphere is a subject of controversy.

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It has been suggested, on the basis of modern hydrology and fully coupled palaeoclimate simulations, that the warm greenhouse conditions that characterized the early Palaeogene period (55-45 Myr ago) probably induced an intensified hydrological cycle with precipitation exceeding evaporation at high latitudes. Little field evidence, however, has been available to constrain oceanic conditions in the Arctic during this period. Here we analyse Palaeogene sediments obtained during the Arctic Coring Expedition, showing that large quantities of the free-floating fern Azolla grew and reproduced in the Arctic Ocean by the onset of the middle Eocene epoch (approximately 50 Myr ago).

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