作者
Jörg Pross, Lineth Contreras, Peter K Bijl, David R Greenwood, Steven M Bohaty, Stefan Schouten, James A Bendle, Ursula Röhl, Lisa Tauxe, J Ian Raine, Claire E Huck, Tina Van De Flierdt, Stewart SR Jamieson, Catherine E Stickley, Bas Van De Schootbrugge, Carlota Escutia, Henk Brinkhuis
发表日期
2012/8/2
期刊
Nature
卷号
488
期号
7409
页码范围
73-77
出版商
Nature Publishing Group UK
简介
The warmest global climates of the past 65 million years occurred during the early Eocene epoch (about 55 to 48 million years ago), when the Equator-to-pole temperature gradients were much smaller than today, and atmospheric carbon dioxide levels were in excess of one thousand parts per million by volume,. Recently the early Eocene has received considerable interest because it may provide insight into the response of Earth’s climate and biosphere to the high atmospheric carbon dioxide levels that are expected in the near future as a consequence of unabated anthropogenic carbon emissions,. Climatic conditions of the early Eocene ‘greenhouse world’, however, are poorly constrained in critical regions, particularly Antarctica. Here we present a well-dated record of early Eocene climate on Antarctica from an ocean sediment core recovered off the Wilkes Land coast of East Antarctica. The information from …
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