前新生代周期地层学和古气候对天文作用力的响应

David De Vleeschouwer, Lawrence M. E. Percival, Nina M. A. Wichern, Sietske J. Batenburg
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摘要

天文日照强迫是第四纪冰期和新生代气候变化的基本节拍器,这一点已得到公认。然而,人们对其对更早时代(中生代、古生代和前寒武纪)的影响了解较少。在这篇综述中,我们将探讨循环地层学如何帮助区分前新生代的气候模式,并帮助我们了解地质年代气候对天文作用力的响应。地质年代的不确定性越来越大,这意味着前新生代的天文解决方案不能用作调整目标。不过,它们可以作为节拍器来确定不同气候状态的步调。在整个前新生代,不同气候状态之间的全球平均温差(5-32 °C)比新生代(14-27 °C)更为极端,再加上生物圈的演化和板块构造的变化,导致了地球系统对天文作用力的不同反应。例如,古生代晚期冰室的特点是对偏心率的明显反应,这是由非线性冰冻圈和碳循环行为引起的。相比之下,泥盆纪暖房和晚白垩世暖房的特点是经常出现海洋缺氧现象,这可能是由天文因素造成的。将 405,000 年偏心率周期正式定义为整个新生代的年代地层单元(天体时间带),将有助于更全面地了解天文作用力是如何在地质年代塑造地球气候的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Pre-Cenozoic cyclostratigraphy and palaeoclimate responses to astronomical forcing
Astronomical insolation forcing is well established as the underlying metronome of Quaternary ice ages and Cenozoic climate changes. Yet its effects on earlier eras (Mesozoic, Palaeozoic and pre-Cambrian) are less understood. In this Review, we explore how cyclostratigraphy can help to distinguish climate modes over the pre-Cenozoic era and aid our understanding of climate responses to astronomical forcing over geological time. The growing uncertainties with geologic age mean that pre-Cenozoic astronomical solutions cannot be used as tuning targets. However, they can be used as metronomes to identify the pacing of distinct climate states. Throughout the pre-Cenozoic, global average temperature differences between climate states were even more extreme (5–32 °C) than in the Cenozoic (14–27 °C), and these, combined with an evolving biosphere and changing plate tectonics, led to distinct Earth-system responses to astronomical forcing. The late Palaeozoic icehouse, for example, is characterized by a pronounced response to eccentricity, caused by nonlinear cryosphere and carbon-cycle behaviour. By contrast, the Devonian warmhouse and the Late Cretaceous hothouse featured recurrent episodes of marine anoxia that may have been paced by astronomical forcing. Formally defining 405,000-year eccentricity cycles as chronostratigraphic units (astrochronozones) throughout the Phanerozoic eon will enable a more comprehensive understanding of how astronomical forcing has shaped Earth’s climate over geologic time. Earth’s climate responds to astronomical forcing cycles that occur over tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands of years. This Review explores the distinct Earth-system responses to astronomical forcing over the pre-Cenozoic era and explains how astronomical cycles are used to calibrate geologic time.
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