“…With reduced ice sheets and warmer Southern Ocean temperatures in the Early Pliocene (McKay et al, 2012; Patterson et al, 2018), the waters formed from the ACC may not have been dense enough to sink to the deep ocean. At 2.7 Ma, the δ 13 C gradient between Site 704 and Site 1123 reversed, possibly related to reduced ventilation of the Southern Ocean caused by increased seasonal sea ice (Hillenbrand & Cortese, 2006; McKay et al, 2012; Patterson et al, 2018), in combination with a southward shift of the polar front and a decrease in the easterlies strength (Zhang, Nisancioglu, Chandler, et al, 2013). From this point in time, SEADW can no longer be recognized as a high‐δ 13 C high‐δ 18 O southern‐sourced water mass, although an analog water mass may still have formed by sinking waters in the ACC.…”