Cretaceous Polar Climates
A. M. Ziegler, M. A. Horrell, A. L. Lottes, T. C. Gierlowski
The Cretaceous, like most Phanerozoic periods, was characterized by ice-free
poles. Some still argue that the glaciers and sea ice were there, and that the
tillites, etc, have been eroded or remain undiscovered. However, diverse floras,
dense forests, coal-forming cypress swamps, and dinosaurs, crocodilians, and
lungfish are known from areas that were certainly at 75°-80° north and south
paleolatitude in the Cretaceous, implying that the coastal basins did not
experience hard freezes. No deep marine connections to the North Pole existed in
the Cretaceous, so oceanic polar heat transport can be discounted. However, the
five north-south trending epeiric or rift-related seaways that connected or
nearly connected the Tethys to the Arctic would have dampened the seas nal
temperature cycle, bringing "maritime" climates deep into the North American and
Eurasian continents and, more importantly, would have served as an energy
source
and channel for winter storms, much as the Gulf Stream does today. Cyclones have
a natural tendency to move poleward, because of the increase in the Coriolis
Parameter, and they transport both sensible and latent heat. The coastal regions
of the relatively warm polar ocean in the Cretaceous would have received
continuous precipitation during the winter because cyclones would be entering
from as many as five directions. Coastal rainfall would also have been abundant
in the summer but for a different reason; the land-sea temperature profile would
reverse, with the warm land surface drawing in moisture, while clear ice-free
con itions over the ocean would allow for
solar
warming.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91030©1988 AAPG Annual Convention, Houston, Texas, 20-23 March 1988.