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Terrestrial ecosystem and climate dynamics during the Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum (~56 Ma) in the high southern latitudes: An integrated palynological/ organic geochemical study of the Margaret Point section, Southern Australia

Subject Area Palaeontology
Term from 2019 to 2022
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 437209343
 
Final Report Year 2022

Final Report Abstract

The Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM; ~56 Ma) is characterized by geologically rapid global warming of ~5 °C over a few thousand years and provides an important paleoanalog for anthropogenic climate change. Current knowledge of terrestrial ecosystem response to the PETM is largely based on the mid-latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere. To more fully reconstruct global terrestrial ecosystem response to the PETM, we generated vegetation and biomarker proxy records from an outcrop section at Point Margaret in southern Australia (Victoria; ~60 °S paleolatitude) – a region for which limited data currently exist. We document a rapid, massive, and sustained vegetation turnover as a response to regional PETM warming of ~3–4 °C, abruptly transitioning from a warm temperate to a mesomegathermal rainforest similar to that of present-day northeastern Queensland (Australia). Within the vegetation-turnover interval, a fern-spore peak suggests a brief stage of disturbed vegetation cover. The onset of the vegetation change leads the characteristic PETM carbonisotope excursion by ~1–4 kyrs. The reconstructed ecosystem change at Point Margaret is much stronger than in other Southern Hemisphere records due to differences in biogeographical and paleoceanographic boundary conditions, highlighting both the regional specificity of terrestrial ecosystem response and the need for a greater geographic coverage to fully understand terrestrial ecosystem response to PETM climate forcing.

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