Paleoceanography and Marine Climate Records
Layer by layer, deep-sea sediments preserve a chemical and fossil diary of the ocean's past, allowing scientists to reconstruct temperatures, ice volume, and circulation across millions of years and to test what drives climate change.
Definition
Paleoceanography is the study of the history of the oceans, reconstructed from marine sediments and their geochemical and fossil records to infer past ocean chemistry, temperature, circulation, and their links to climate.
Scope
This topic covers the proxies used to reconstruct past ocean conditions — stable isotopes, microfossil assemblages, trace-element ratios — the dating of marine sequences, the reconstruction of past temperature, ice volume, and circulation, and the evidence linking orbital forcing to glacial cycles.
Core questions
- What proxies record past ocean temperature, ice volume, and circulation?
- How are marine sediment records dated and correlated?
- What does the oxygen-isotope record reveal about glacial-interglacial cycles?
- How does the marine record test the role of orbital forcing in driving ice ages?
Key theories
- Oxygen-isotope paleothermometry and ice volume
- The ratio of oxygen isotopes in fossil shells records a combination of seawater temperature and global ice volume, providing a primary archive of past climate as developed by Emiliani and Shackleton.
- Orbital (Milankovitch) pacing of ice ages
- Spectral analysis of marine sediment records reveals cycles matching variations in Earth's orbit, confirming that orbital changes pace the timing of glacial-interglacial cycles.
Mechanisms
Microfossils and sediments incorporate chemical signals — isotope ratios, trace elements, and species assemblages — that vary with the ocean conditions at the time of deposition. By dating cores and measuring these proxies down through the layers, paleoceanographers reconstruct past temperature, ice volume, and circulation and compare their timing with orbital and other forcings.
Clinical relevance
Paleoceanographic records reveal how the ocean and climate behaved under past conditions, including times warmer than today, providing essential context and constraints for projecting future climate change and the ocean's response to it.
History
Emiliani pioneered oxygen-isotope analysis of deep-sea foraminifera in the 1950s; Shackleton refined its interpretation in terms of ice volume, and the 1976 Hays, Imbrie, and Shackleton study demonstrated the orbital pacing of ice ages, establishing paleoceanography as a quantitative test of climate theory.
Key figures
- Cesare Emiliani
- Nicholas Shackleton
- John Imbrie
Related topics
Seminal works
- bradley2015
- hays1976
Frequently asked questions
- How can sediments record past ocean temperature?
- The shells of marine plankton lock in chemical signals, such as oxygen-isotope and trace-element ratios, that depend on the temperature and chemistry of the water in which they grew, preserving a record in the sediment.
- What are Milankovitch cycles?
- They are slow, predictable variations in Earth's orbit and tilt that change the distribution of sunlight and pace the advance and retreat of ice ages, a link confirmed by marine sediment records.