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Accelerated mafic weathering in Southeast Asia linked to late Neogene cooling.

Germain BayonMartin PatriatYves GoddérisAnne TrinquierPatrick De DeckkerDenise K KulhanekAnn E HolbournYair Rosenthal
Published in: Science advances (2023)
Arc-continent collision in Southeast Asia during the Neogene may have driven global cooling through chemical weathering of freshly exposed ophiolites resulting in atmospheric CO 2 removal. Yet, little is known about the cause-and-effect relationships between erosion and the long-term evolution of tectonics and climate in this region. Here, we present an 8-million-year record of seawater chemistry and sediment provenance from the eastern Indian Ocean, near the outflow of Indonesian Throughflow waters. Using geochemical analyses of foraminiferal shells and grain size-specific detrital fractions, we show that erosion and chemical weathering of ophiolitic rocks markedly increased after 4 million years (Ma), coincident with widespread island emergence and gradual strengthening of Pacific zonal sea-surface temperature gradients. Together with supportive evidence for enhanced mafic weathering at that time from re-analysis of the seawater 87 Sr/ 86 Sr curve, this finding suggests that island uplift and hydroclimate change in the western Pacific contributed to maintaining high atmospheric CO 2 consumption throughout the late Neogene.
Keyphrases
  • heavy metals
  • south africa
  • particulate matter
  • climate change
  • molecularly imprinted
  • air pollution
  • health risk
  • mass spectrometry
  • high resolution
  • carbon dioxide
  • polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons