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Obliquity disruption and Antarctic ice sheet dynamics over a 2.4-Myr astronomical grand cycle

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-06-02, 14:18 authored by Nicholas B Sullivan, Stephen R Meyers, Richard H Levy, Robert M McKay, Tina van de Flierdt, James Marschalek, Matteo Perotti, Luca Zurli, Franco Talarico, David Harwood, Laura De Santis, Fabio Florindo, Tim R Naish, Georgia R Grant, Molly O Patterson, IODP Expedition 374 Scientists
Marine δ 18 O data reveal astronomical forcing of the climate and cryosphere during the Miocene, when atmospheric P co 2 was on par with emissions scenarios over the next century. This inspired hypotheses for how Milankovitch cycles, ice-ocean interactions, and greenhouse gases influence ice volume. Mass balance controls for marine and terrestrial ice sheets differ, and proxy data collected far from Antarctica provide valuable but limited insight into regional processes. We evaluate clast abundance data from Antarctic marine sedimentary records, observing a strong signal of eccentricity and precession coincident with a terrestrial ice sheet and a clear obliquity signal at the margins of a marine ice sheet. These analyses are integrated with a synthesis of proxy data, and we argue that high variance in obliquity forcing (mediated and enhanced by the ocean and atmosphere) can inhibit ice sheet growth, even when insolation forcing is conducive to glaciation. This “obliquity disruption” explains cryosphere variability before the existence of large northern hemisphere ice sheets.

History

Author affiliation

College of Science & Engineering Geography, Geology & Environment

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Science Advances

Volume

11

Issue

17

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

eissn

2375-2548

Copyright date

2025

Available date

2025-06-02

Language

en

Deposited by

Dr Tim van Peer

Deposit date

2025-05-07

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