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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2020-06-18
    Description: The Palaeocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum(1,2) (PETM) was a global warming event that occurred about 56 million years ago, and is commonly thought to have been driven primarily by the destabilization of carbon from surface sedimentary reservoirs such as methane hydrates(3). However, it remains controversial whether such reservoirs were indeed the source of the carbon that drove the warming(1,3-5). Resolving this issue is key to understanding the proximal cause of the warming, and to quantifying the roles of triggers versus feedbacks. Here we present boron isotope data-a proxy for seawater pH-that show that the ocean surface pH was persistently low during the PETM. We combine our pH data with a paired carbon isotope record in an Earth system model in order to reconstruct the unfolding carbon-cycle dynamics during the event(6,7). We find strong evidence for a much larger (more than 10,000 petagrams)-and, on average, isotopically heavier-carbon source than considered previously(8,9). This leads us to identify volcanism associated with the North Atlantic Igneous Province(10,11), rather than carbon from a surface reservoir, as the main driver of the PETM. This finding implies that climate-driven amplification of organic carbon feedbacks probably played only a minor part in driving the event. However, we find that enhanced burial of organic matter seems to have been important in eventually sequestering the released carbon and accelerating the recovery of the Earth system(12).
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 2
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    The Paleontological Society
    In:  The Paleontological Society Papers, 12 . pp. 125-143.
    Publication Date: 2020-03-06
    Description: The main goal is to introduce some of the technical methods of time series analysis and cyclostratigraphy, with the overall focus to enable interested scientists with little experience in time series analysis to “get their hands dirty” while analysing their own data sets. The course notes make use of example data sets, and provide pointers to additional methods and software to conduct the basic steps of analysis of geological data that appear to show evidence of cyclicity. The short course notes presented here were originally developed as teaching material for advanced undergraduate and postgraduate students at the University of Cambridge and Stockholm University. The original notes were modified and enhanced, and aim to supplement the presentation during the Paleontological Society Short Course 2006.
    Type: Article , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
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