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Ice sheet-free West Antarctica during peak early Oligocene glaciation.

Johann P KlagesClaus-Dieter HillenbrandSteven M BohatyUlrich SalzmannTorsten BickertG LohmannH S KnahlP GierzL NiuJürgen TitschackGerhard KuhnThomas FrederichsJuliane MüllerThorsten BauersachsRobert D LarterKatharina HochmuthWerner EhrmannG NehrkeFrancisco J Rodríguez-TovarGerhard SchmiedlS SpezzaferriA LäuferFrank LiskerTina van de FlierdtAnton EisenhauerGabriele Uenzelmann-NebenO EsperJ A SmithHeiko PälikeCornelia SpiegelR DziadekT A RongeT FreudenthalKarsten Gohl
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2024)
One of Earth's most fundamental climate shifts, the greenhouse-icehouse transition 34 million years ago, initiated Antarctic ice sheet buildup, influencing global climate until today. However, the extent of the ice sheet during the Early Oligocene Glacial Maximum (~33.7 to 33.2 million years ago) that immediately followed this transition-a critical knowledge gap for assessing feedbacks between permanently glaciated areas and early Cenozoic global climate reorganization-is uncertain. In this work, we present shallow-marine drilling data constraining earliest Oligocene environmental conditions on West Antarctica's Pacific margin-a key region for understanding Antarctic ice sheet evolution. These data indicate a cool-temperate environment with mild ocean and air temperatures that prevented West Antarctic Ice Sheet formation. Climate-ice sheet modeling corroborates a highly asymmetric Antarctic ice sheet, thereby revealing its differential regional response to past and future climatic change.
Keyphrases
  • climate change
  • risk assessment
  • machine learning
  • deep learning