Programme des sessions > Par auteur > Seufert Alina

Mid-Eocene Climate Optimum environmental changes in Central Asia (Kazakhstan) and potential relations with Eurasian paleoecological dispersals
Guillaume Dupont-Nivet  1@  , Silke Voigt  2@  , Alina Seufert  2@  , Kerstin Hartmann  2@  , Erwin Appel, Saida Nigmatova  3@  , Pauline Coster  4@  , Alexis Licht  5@  , Jared Shiffert  6@  , Nariman Jamikeshev  1@  
1 : Géosciences Rennes
Université de Rennes, Institut National des Sciences de l'Univers, Observatoire des Sciences de l'Univers de Rennes, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
2 : Université de Frankfort
3 : Satbayev Geology Institute
4 : Réserve naturelle géologique du Lubéron
Réserves Naturelles de France
5 : Centre européen de recherche et d'enseignement des géosciences de l'environnement
Institut de Recherche pour le Développement, Aix Marseille Université, Collège de France, Institut National des Sciences de l'Univers, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
6 : University of Cambridge

Climatic optima and hyperthermals of the Paleogene period (66-34 Ma) open windows into the past to explore the Earth System under extreme conditions, beyond several tipping points. During this period Central Asia was intensely hot and arid and offered only a few corridors between Asian and European ecosystems that enabled significant dispersal events such as the "Grande Coupure". These events may have been triggered by climatic and/or paleogeographical events including the fluctuations of the proto-Paratethys epicontinental sea and its progressive retreat. To date, it has been difficult to disentangle these various forcing factors. Sedimentary sections and associated climate tracers in this region and period are notoriously rare, and existing records suffer from poor age control that precludes robust correlations. We present here a high-resolution magnetostratigraphic dating of integrated environmental proxies from deposits of the Ili Basin, Kazakhstan, bearing rare Eocene mammal fossils. Preliminary results suggest the section encompasses a significantly wetter phase that can be precisely correlated to the Middle Eocene Climate Optimum, a globally recognized hyperthermal expressed by various extreme climate events from 40.5 to 40.1 Ma. In the studied Ili Basin record, mammal fossils are reported to come precisely from this wet interval. This singular concentration of evidence suggests the MECO may have promoted Eurasian dispersal towards Balkanatolia already in the Bartonian before the Grande Coupure. Further climate modelling and proxy data are required to identify potential controlling mechanisms.


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