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The SSP Division Outstanding Early Career Scientist Award was awarded to Anna Joy Drury for her fundamental contributions to research on Miocene stable isotope stratigraphy, paleoceanography and climate evolution.

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Convener: Marc De Batist | Co-convener: Helmut Weissert
Abstract
| Attendance Tue, 05 May, 16:15–18:00 (CEST)

Chat time: Tuesday, 5 May 2020, 16:15–18:00

Chairperson: David De Vleeschouwer
D1042 |
EGU2020-16771
| Highlight
| SSP Division Outstanding ECS Lecture
Anna Joy Drury, Thomas Westerhold, David Hodell, Sarah White, Ana Christina Ravelo, and Roy Wilkens

Accurate stable isotope stratigraphies are essential for understanding how past climates are influenced by orbital forcing. Deep-sea benthic foraminiferal δ18O and δ13C stratigraphies can provide precise astronomical age control and record changes in past deep-sea ocean temperatures, global ice volume and the carbon cycle. Our understanding of Plio-Pleistocene climate dynamics has improved through the development of global (LR04; Lisiecki & Raymo, 2005) and regional stacks (Ceara Rise; Wilkens et al., 2017). However, the late Miocene climate system remains poorly understood, in part because the late Miocene benthic foraminiferal δ18O stratigraphy is notoriously low amplitude.

Here, we present the first global late Miocene global benthic foraminiferal δ18O compilation spanning 8.00-5.33 Ma. We formed a “Base Stack” using six continuous benthic stratigraphies from the Atlantic (ODP Sites 982 (N), 926 (E) and 1264 (S)) and Pacific Oceans (IODP Sites U1337 and U1338 (E), ODP Site 1146 (W)). To avoid misidentification of individual excursions between sites, we verified existing splices, generated isotope data where necessary and established independent astrochronologies. To accompany the “Base Stack”, we compiled a “Comprehensive Stack”, which incorporates single-hole benthic δ18O stratigraphies to optimise global coverage.

The new global late Miocene benthic foraminiferal δ18O stack represents a stratigraphic reference section back to 8.00 Ma. The stack is accurately tied to the Geomagnetic Polarity Time Scale between Chrons C3r and C4n.2n using the magnetostratigraphy from IODP Site U1337. We recognise 68 new δ18O Marine Isotope Stages (MIS) between 7.7 and 6.5 Ma. An exceptional global response is imprinted on the dispersed sites between 7.7-6.9 & 6.4-5.4 Ma, when a strong 40 kyr heartbeat dominates the climate system. The origin of these cycles remains unclear. The influence of deep-sea temperature on the benthic δ18O stack is explored at IODP Site U1337 using Mg/Ca data. The dominant 40-kyr δ18O cycles are asymmetric, suggesting at least a partial ice volume imprint and raising the possibility that these cycles relate to early signs of northern hemisphere glaciation.

How to cite: Drury, A. J., Westerhold, T., Hodell, D., White, S., Ravelo, A. C., and Wilkens, R.: Constraints on late Miocene ice volume variability from a global benthic δ18O compilation (8.0-5.0 Ma), EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-16771, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-16771, 2020.