Abstract
Global temperatures rose ~6°C from the late Paleocene ca. 58 Ma to the Early Eocene Climatic Optimum
(EECO) ca. 52–50 Ma. Superimposed, were certainly two geologically brief (< 200 kyr) intervals of
extreme warming, the Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum (PETM) and Eocene thermal maximum 2
(ETM-2 or H-1); at least four more events, H-2,
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I-1, I-2 and K/X, probably occurred. Both the longterm
rise and short-term “hyperthermals” have been linked to massive injections of 13C-depleted carbon
into the ocean-atmosphere system and greater continental weathering. However, relationships remain
uncertain, principally because detailed and coupled proxy records do not extend across the entire
interval of interest.
Mead Stream, New Zealand, exposes a ~650 m-thick sequence of limestone originally deposited on an
upper continental slope from the late Cretaceous to the middle Eocene. Previous work has provided
accurate ages for this expanded section, and has shown that the PETM, ETM-2, H-2, I-1 and I-2
hyperthermals are marked by pronounced negative carbon isotope excursions (CIEs) and clay-rich
horizons (marls), the latter caused by excess terrigenous dilution. 283 new samples were collected,
mostly above the I-2 event; these were analyzed for carbonate content, lithology, and bulk carbonate
carbon isotopes. A greatly expanded (100 m-thick) unit represented by a series of marl beds lies above I-2
and correlates to the EECO. Carbonate contents are generally 60–90% throughout the studied interval,
with lows being marls. The δ13C is generally low but, in detail, represents a series of negative CIEs with
magnitudes ranging between 0.2–0.6‰. Of these, the K/X/ETM-3 event is the most pronounced (0.6‰).
The late Paleocene-early Eocene δ13C record at Mead Stream is remarkably similar to that generated
at Site 1262 at Walvis Ridge (south Atlantic), except that lows in δ13C span intervals of relatively high
sedimentation (terrigenous dilution) rather than intervals of relatively low sedimentation (carbonate
dissolution). We suggest that over ~6 million years, there was a series of short-term climate perturbations,
each characterized by massive carbon input and greater continental weathering. The suspected link
involves global warming and enhanced seasonality in precipitation. We are evaluating this model further
by identifying hyperthermal events in DSDP sites from the Indian Ocean, and assessing whether they
are related to carbonate dissolution or siliciclastic dilution
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