Evidence for Eocene–Oligocene glaciation in the landscape of the East Greenland margin
Abstract
Assessing the onset and extent of Northern Hemisphere glaciation is required to understand
Cenozoic climate change and its impact on topography. While the onset of accelerated Cenozoic
erosion is generally associated with the Quaternary at mid-latitudes, some high-latitude
passive margins may have undergone earlier glaciation starting at 38–30 Ma or even 45 Ma.
Here we document a rapid phase of exhumation in the East Greenland margin between 68°N
and 76°N starting at 30 ± 5 Ma. The timing is coincident with the dramatic worldwide fall of
surface temperature at the Eocene-Oligocene transition. Our inference is based on apatite
fission track and apatite helium data. We suggest that a transition from an Eocene fluvial to
an Oligocene glacial-dominated landscape triggered a period of enhanced erosion. This study
provides the first onshore potential evidence of the onset of continental ice in East Greenland
margin at the Eocene-Oligocene transition (ca. 34 Ma), contemporaneously with the onset of
Antarctica glaciation and erosion. Our interpretation is consistent with that based on the oldest
ice-rafted debris found in the sedimentary records offshore East Greenland and implies
that East Greenland exhibits the oldest onshore record of Cenozoic glacial erosion on Earth.