Cyclone trends constrain monsoon variability during late Oligocene sea level highstands (Kachchh Basin, NW India)

Climate change has an unknown impact on tropical cyclones and the Asian monsoon. Herein we present a sequence of fossil shell beds from the shallow-marine Maniyara Fort Formation (Kachcch Basin) as a recorder of tropical cyclone activity along the NW Indian coast during the late Oligocene warming pe...

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Main Authors: M. Reuter, W. E. Piller, M. Harzhauser, A. Kroh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2013-09-01
Series:Climate of the Past
Online Access:http://www.clim-past.net/9/2101/2013/cp-9-2101-2013.pdf
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spelling doaj-664e96a20edf423e975ae743ea98c2be2020-11-24T23:22:17ZengCopernicus PublicationsClimate of the Past1814-93241814-93322013-09-01952101211510.5194/cp-9-2101-2013Cyclone trends constrain monsoon variability during late Oligocene sea level highstands (Kachchh Basin, NW India)M. ReuterW. E. PillerM. HarzhauserA. KrohClimate change has an unknown impact on tropical cyclones and the Asian monsoon. Herein we present a sequence of fossil shell beds from the shallow-marine Maniyara Fort Formation (Kachcch Basin) as a recorder of tropical cyclone activity along the NW Indian coast during the late Oligocene warming period (~ 27–24 Ma). Proxy data providing information about the atmospheric circulation dynamics over the Indian subcontinent at this time are important since it corresponds to a major climate reorganization in Asia that ends up with the establishment of the modern Asian monsoon system at the Oligocene–Miocene boundary. The vast shell concentrations are comprised of a mixture of parautochthonous and allochthonous assemblages indicating storm-generated sediment transport from deeper to shallow water during third-order sea level highstands. Three distinct skeletal assemblages were distinguished, each recording a relative storm wave base. (1) A shallow storm wave base is shown by nearshore molluscs, reef corals and <i>Clypeaster</i> echinoids; (2) an intermediate storm wave base depth is indicated by lepidocyclinid foraminifers, <i>Eupatagus</i> echinoids and corallinacean algae; and (3) a deep storm wave base is represented by an <i>Amussiopecten</i> bivalve-<i>Schizaster</i> echinoid assemblage. These wave base depth estimates were used for the reconstruction of long-term tropical storm intensity during the late Oligocene. The development and intensification of cyclones over the recent Arabian Sea is primarily limited by the atmospheric monsoon circulation and strength of the associated vertical wind shear. Therefore, since the topographic boundary conditions for the Indian monsoon already existed in the late Oligocene, the reconstructed long-term cyclone trends were interpreted to reflect monsoon variability during the initiation of the Asian monsoon system. Our results imply an active monsoon over the Eastern Tethys at ~ 26 Ma followed by a period of monsoon weakening during the peak of the late Oligocene global warming (~ 24 Ma).http://www.clim-past.net/9/2101/2013/cp-9-2101-2013.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author M. Reuter
W. E. Piller
M. Harzhauser
A. Kroh
spellingShingle M. Reuter
W. E. Piller
M. Harzhauser
A. Kroh
Cyclone trends constrain monsoon variability during late Oligocene sea level highstands (Kachchh Basin, NW India)
Climate of the Past
author_facet M. Reuter
W. E. Piller
M. Harzhauser
A. Kroh
author_sort M. Reuter
title Cyclone trends constrain monsoon variability during late Oligocene sea level highstands (Kachchh Basin, NW India)
title_short Cyclone trends constrain monsoon variability during late Oligocene sea level highstands (Kachchh Basin, NW India)
title_full Cyclone trends constrain monsoon variability during late Oligocene sea level highstands (Kachchh Basin, NW India)
title_fullStr Cyclone trends constrain monsoon variability during late Oligocene sea level highstands (Kachchh Basin, NW India)
title_full_unstemmed Cyclone trends constrain monsoon variability during late Oligocene sea level highstands (Kachchh Basin, NW India)
title_sort cyclone trends constrain monsoon variability during late oligocene sea level highstands (kachchh basin, nw india)
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Climate of the Past
issn 1814-9324
1814-9332
publishDate 2013-09-01
description Climate change has an unknown impact on tropical cyclones and the Asian monsoon. Herein we present a sequence of fossil shell beds from the shallow-marine Maniyara Fort Formation (Kachcch Basin) as a recorder of tropical cyclone activity along the NW Indian coast during the late Oligocene warming period (~ 27–24 Ma). Proxy data providing information about the atmospheric circulation dynamics over the Indian subcontinent at this time are important since it corresponds to a major climate reorganization in Asia that ends up with the establishment of the modern Asian monsoon system at the Oligocene–Miocene boundary. The vast shell concentrations are comprised of a mixture of parautochthonous and allochthonous assemblages indicating storm-generated sediment transport from deeper to shallow water during third-order sea level highstands. Three distinct skeletal assemblages were distinguished, each recording a relative storm wave base. (1) A shallow storm wave base is shown by nearshore molluscs, reef corals and <i>Clypeaster</i> echinoids; (2) an intermediate storm wave base depth is indicated by lepidocyclinid foraminifers, <i>Eupatagus</i> echinoids and corallinacean algae; and (3) a deep storm wave base is represented by an <i>Amussiopecten</i> bivalve-<i>Schizaster</i> echinoid assemblage. These wave base depth estimates were used for the reconstruction of long-term tropical storm intensity during the late Oligocene. The development and intensification of cyclones over the recent Arabian Sea is primarily limited by the atmospheric monsoon circulation and strength of the associated vertical wind shear. Therefore, since the topographic boundary conditions for the Indian monsoon already existed in the late Oligocene, the reconstructed long-term cyclone trends were interpreted to reflect monsoon variability during the initiation of the Asian monsoon system. Our results imply an active monsoon over the Eastern Tethys at ~ 26 Ma followed by a period of monsoon weakening during the peak of the late Oligocene global warming (~ 24 Ma).
url http://www.clim-past.net/9/2101/2013/cp-9-2101-2013.pdf
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