Litcius/Paper detail

Emergence of the Southeast Asian islands as a driver for Neogene cooling

Yuem Park, Pierre Maffre, Yves Goddéris, Francis A. Macdonald, Eliel S.C. Anttila, Nicholas L. Swanson‐Hysell

2020Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences100 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Significance The Southeast Asian islands are a modern-day hotspot of CO 2 consumption via silicate weathering. Since ∼15 million years ago, these islands have been increasing in size at the same time that Earth’s climate has been cooling. Here, we test the hypothesis that this global cooling could have been driven by tectonic emergence of the Southeast Asian islands. Using a compilation of paleoshorelines, in conjunction with a coupled silicate weathering and climate model, we find that this emergence is associated with a large decrease in p CO 2 . Without these changes in tropical island paleogeography, there would not have been large Northern Hemisphere ice sheets as a defining feature of Earth’s climate over the past 3 million years.

Topics & Concepts

NeogeneSoutheast asiaGeologyGlobal coolingEarth scienceClimatologyPaleontologyOceanographyHistoryClimate changeAncient historyStructural basinGeological and Geophysical StudiesGeology and Paleoclimatology ResearchHydrocarbon exploration and reservoir analysis