ENIGMA: something that is mysterious, puzzling, or difficult to understand.

Similar documents
Milankovitch Theory of the Ice Ages

Chapter Causes of Climate Change Part I: Milankovitch Cycles

The Ice Age sequence in the Quaternary

Our Geologic Backdrop: Ice Age Cycles

lecture 12 Paleoclimate

Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) = thermohaline circulation in N Atlantic. Wikipedia

Ice on Earth: An overview and examples on physical properties

We re living in the Ice Age!

ATOC OUR CHANGING ENVIRONMENT Class 19 (Chp 6) Objectives of Today s Class: The Cryosphere [1] Components, time scales; [2] Seasonal snow

Outline 23: The Ice Ages-Cenozoic Climatic History

ATMS 321: Natural Climate Variability Chapter 11

Lecture 21: Glaciers and Paleoclimate Read: Chapter 15 Homework due Thursday Nov. 12. What we ll learn today:! Learning Objectives (LO)

History. Late 18 th /early 19 th century Europeans observed that erratic boulders dispersed due to the retention of glaciers caused by climate chance

Ice Sheets and Glaciers

Natural Climate Variability: Longer Term

Pleistocene Glaciations

Orbital-Scale Interactions in the Climate System. Speaker:

Glaciers form wherever snow and ice can accumulate High latitudes High mountains at low latitudes Ice temperatures vary among glaciers Warm

A brief lesson on oxygen isotopes. more ice less ice

Major climate change triggers

Welcome to ATMS 111 Global Warming.

Lab 3. Orbital Configurations and Milankovitch Cycles

Ice Ages and Changes in Earth s Orbit. Topic Outline

Pleistocene Glaciation (Ch.14) Geologic evidence Milankovitch cycles Glacial climate feedbacks

IMA. Celestial Influences on Glacial Cycles. Math and Climate Seminar

Chp Spectral analysis a. Requires that the climate record must be at least 4 times longer than the cycled analyzed

Glaciers and Ice Ages

The State of the cryosphere

An Orbital Theory for Glacial Cycles

Glacial Geomorphology Lecture 1: Glaciers & Glacial Environments. GGY 166: Geomorphology of Southern Africa

How do glaciers form?

Glaciers Earth 9th Edition Chapter 18 Glaciers: summary in haiku form Key Concepts Glaciers Glaciers Glaciers Glaciers

Paleoceanography II Telluric Effects on Oceanography

Lecture 10: Seasons and Ice Age. Earth s Orbit and Its Variations. Perihelion and Aphelion. Tilt Produces Seasons

CLIMATE CHANGE IN ARCTIC AND ALPINE AREAS

WELCOME TO PERIOD 14:CLIMATE CHANGE. Homework #13 is due today.

Glaciers. (Shaping Earth s Surface, Part 6) Science 330 Summer 2005

8. Climate changes Short-term regional variations

Exploring The Polar Connection to Sea Level Rise NGSS Disciplinary Core Ideas Science & Engineering Crosscutting Concepts

Monday, December 4, 2017 The Pleistocene Glaciations (Chapter 14) Week 14 Assessment, closes Wednesday Dec 6

Seasonal & Diurnal Temp Variations. Earth-Sun Distance. Eccentricity 2/2/2010. ATS351 Lecture 3

Lecture 8 Glacial-interglacial variability: phenomenology and dynamical background

Global climate change

Geos Orogeny-mountain building: existing mountain belts are the result of Cenozoic tectonics. Cenozoic tectonism and climate.

Observation: predictable patterns of ecosystem distribution across Earth. Observation: predictable patterns of ecosystem distribution across Earth 1.

Ice in the climate system. Summary so far. Today. The Cryosphere. 1. Climate history of the Earth. 2. Paleo observations (1)

Recent Developments in the Theory of Glacial Cycles

Today s Lecture: Land, biosphere, cryosphere (All that stuff we don t have equations for... )

Introduction to Climate Change

NATS 101 Section 13: Lecture 32. Paleoclimate

Agronomy 406 World Climates

Milankovitch Cycles. Milankovitch Cycles. Milankovitch Cycles. Milankovitch Cycles. Milankovitch Cycles. Milankovitch Cycles.

Today we will discuss global climate: how it has changed in the past, and how the current status and possible future look.

Lecture 7: Natural Climate Change. Instructor: Prof. Johnny Luo.

TOPIC #12 NATURAL CLIMATIC FORCING

Glaciers. A glacier is a persistent mass of ice: snow accumulation exceeds melting. generally occur in two areas: high latitudes, or high elevations

TOPIC #12. Wrap Up on GLOBAL CLIMATE PATTERNS

MAR110 LECTURE #28 Climate Change I

NASA Images of Antarctica and the Arctic covered in both land and sea ice

Name Date. What s the weather like today? Watch the beginning of the video Basics of geography- climate.

6. What has been the most effective erosive agent in the climate system? a. Water b. Ice c. Wind

NATS 101 Section 13: Lecture 7. The Seasons

The Distribution of Cold Environments

Paleoclimatology ATMS/ESS/OCEAN 589. Abrupt Climate Change During the Last Glacial Period

Glacial-Interglacial Cycling: Ice, orbital theory, and climate. Dr. Tracy M. Quan IMCS

Where is Earth s Water?

Variations in the Earth's Orbit: Pacemaker of the Ice Ages

Climate and Environment

Any Questions? Glacier

Glaciers. Geology of the Hawaiian Islands. Any Questions? Earth Systems Today CD. Class April Why do we care?

Development of the Global Environment

PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY. By Brett Lucas

Today s Climate in Perspective: Hendrick Avercamp ( ) ~1608; Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

Glaciers. Valley and Piedmont Glaciers. Glaciers, Gloobal Warming El Niño and the Southern Oscillation. Ice Age Sea Level on North America

Summary. The Ice Ages and Global Climate

( 1 d 2 ) (Inverse Square law);

Amazing Ice: Glaciers and Ice Ages

Chapter 6: Global Climate Change

Glacial Modification of Terrain

Chapter 5: Glaciers and Deserts

Quarternary Climate Variations

Energy Balance Models

SAMPLE PAGE. pulses. The Ice Age By: Sue Peterson

2006 UAH REGIONAL SCIENCE OLYMPIAD DYNAMIC PLANET EXAM

MAR110 LECTURE #22 Climate Change

Topic 6: Insolation and the Seasons

Lecture 3: Global Energy Cycle

Father of Glacial theory. First investigations of glaciers and mountain geology,

Glacier (and ice sheet) Mass Balance

Ruddiman CHAPTER 13. Earth during the LGM ca. 20 ka BP

Extent of Periglacial = Global Permafrost Permafrost: Soil and/or rock where temperatures remain below 0 degrees C for 2 or more years.

The Great Ice Ages. Copyright abcteach.com 2001 Graphics from Art Today

Meteorology Practice Test

Watch for Week 8/9 Review Assessment

Lecture 10 Glaciers and glaciation

Last Time. Submarine Canyons and Fans. Turbidites. MAS 603: Geological Oceanography. Lecture 16: Greenhouse vs. Icehouse Earths

The continent of Antarctica Resource N1

Chapter 1 Section 2. Land, Water, and Climate

Meltdown Evidence of Climate Change from Polar Science. Eric Wolff

A GCM Reconstruction of the Last Glacial Inception

Transcription:

Lecture 12. Attempts to solve the Eccentricity Enigma ENIGMA: something that is mysterious, puzzling, or difficult to understand.

Milankovitch forcing glacier responses pre-900,000 yr BP glacier responses post-900,000 yr BP

41,000-yr Earth 100,000-yr Earth

Eccentricity Doesn t show up Q1. Why is 41-ka period dominant and not 23 ka?

Eccentricity Doesn t show up Q1. Why is 41 dominant and not 23 ka? Q2. Why this 100,000 yr dominance? (the Eccentricity Enigma)

4 hypotheses explaining the dominance of the 41-ka (obliquity) cycle and the 41-ka to 100-ka transition 1) Ruddiman (2003 and in our textbook) 2) Raymo et al (2006) 3) Jung-Eun Lee at al (2017) 4) Marshall and Clark (2002)

Ruddiman, W.F. (2006). Ice-driven CO 2 feedback on ice volume. Climates of the Past 2, 43-55. I have made millions off your textbook. Thanks!

precession is the stronger forcing, but obliquity s persists longer

Ruddiman: We can dispense with the question of why the 41-ka (obliquity) cycle dominates over the stronger 21-ka precession cycle because. Please recommend my text book to your family and friends.

Ruddiman: We can dispense with the question of why the 41-ka (obliquity) cycle dominates over the stronger 21-ka precession cycle because. if you take into account the longerlasting forcing from the 41-ka cycle, it has a 50% greater effect on ice sheets.

Analogy: given enough time, even a small stream can create a large valley.

on the warmer, pre-900,000-yr Earth: colder warmer precession + tilt + CO 2 positive feedback on icesheet growth.ice sheets can grow to a 41-ka size

Four hypotheses explaining the dominance of the 41-ka (obliquity) cycle and the 41-ka to 100-ka transition 1) Ruddiman (2003 and in our textbook) 2) Raymo et al (2006) 3) Lee at al (2017) 4) Marshall and Clark (2002) Maureen Raymo, Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory

Increases in obliquity (tilt) accentuate seasonal differences in radiation received at both poles.

In contrast, the precessional cycle causes changes in incident solar radiation that are opposite in each hemisphere over the course of a year.

If the Arctic s summer occurs at aphelion (less radiation), then the Antarctic summer occurs at perihelion (more radiation), and vice versa. perihelion in Arctic summer 23 ka aphelion in Antarctic summer Precession of the Equinoxes

the precessional cycle causes changes in incident solar radiation that are opposite in each hemisphere over the course of a year.

perihelion in Arctic summer 23 ka aphelion in Antarctic summer

Arctic cooling Antarctic warming net result: global changes in sea level and del 18 O precession cancel out. and vice versa

Milankovitch forcing.which leaves obliquity (tilt) the dominant Milankovitch glacier responses pre-900,000 yr BP forcing frequency glacier responses post-900,000 yr BP

.and a higher tilt means more / less radiation simultaneously at both poles.

When obliquity high, summers in both hemispheres receive more insolation, and winters less.

back to Raymo et al (2006):

Raymo et al (2006): the 900,000-yr transition was caused by Antarctic ice sheets switching from land-terminating glaciers sensitive to summer warmth to marine-based (calving) ice sheets insensitive to summer climate and sensitive instead only to global sea level.

and what controls global eustatic sea level?

.continental ice sheets

.but only those that lose and gain a lot of ice mass not Antarctica perched on its frozen continent. Arctic Basin can only accumulate sea ice and ice shelves Antarctica: 1000s meters of ice safely stored on land Norwegian Polar Institute

Today (in midst of an interglacial) ablation in Antarctica mainly through iceberg calving

most calving occurs at termini of ice shelves

calving rates sensitive to changes in global sea level Ice edge of the Brunt Ice Shelf near Halley Research Station Chris Gilbe

Rising sea level floats an ice shelf, which triggers calving retreat.

So.after 900,000 yr, Antarctica so cold even in summer that most ablation occurs via iceberg calving (like today).

So.Antarctica now so cold even in summer that all ablation occurs via ice berg calving (like today). Antarctic stops being sensitive to summer temperature.

and N hemisphere ice sheets control global sea level. Arctic Basin can only accumulate sea ice and ice shelves Antarctica: 1000s meters of ice safely stored on land Norwegian Polar Institute

Antarctica relinquishes control of ice age climate to the northern hemisphere

Eustatic sea level brings ice sheets in both polar hemispheres into phase perihelion in Arctic summer 23 ka aphelion in Antarctic summer

Ice sheet dynamics at both poles now in phase. Result = Climatic changes greater, Ice sheet fluctuations larger

But what about the Eccentricity Enigma? 41,000-yr Earth 100,000-yr Earth

Raymo et al (2006): Once the two poles are in phase, larger ice sheets can develop, and global climate can cool further.

To the point where N hemisphere ice sheets are large enough to survive most summer-insolation maxima.

This leads the way to the development of the 100,000-yr cycle.

Three hypotheses explaining the dominance of the 41- ka (obliquity) cycle and the 41-ka to 100-ka transition 1) Ruddiman (2003 and in our textbook) 2) Raymo et al (2006) 3) Lee at al (2017) 4) Marshall and Clark (2002)

Jung-Eng Lee

Today: Larger seasonal changes in sea ice cover in Southern Ocean than in northern hemisphere

Lee et al s hypothesis: 1) eccentricity (100 ka) modulates strength of precession (21 ka) on incoming solar radiation 2) high eccentricity amplifies the effect of summer aphelion on sea ice extent in southern hemisphere eccentricity sea ice maxima 21 ka 21 ka 21 ka 400,000 300,000 200,000 100,000 today

Why is this effect not symmetric? (if it were symmetrical, sea ice changes in the N hemisphere would cancel out sea ice changes in the S hemisphere)

Why is this effect not symmetric? (if it were symmetrical, sea ice changes in the N hemisphere would cancel out sea ice changes in the S hemisphere) (not enough additional space for ice to grow in N hemisphere)

Lee et al (2017) methods: Model does not include ocean circulation, glacial dynamics, or carbon cycle

How much difference does it make? Increase in sea ice between S hemisphere summer perihelion and S hemisphere summer aphelion

Lee et al s hypothesis: 1) eccentricity (100 ka) modulates strength of precession (21 ka) on incoming solar radiation 2) high eccentricity amplifies the effect of summer aphelion on sea ice extent in southern hemisphere eccentricity sea ice maxima 21 ka 21 ka 21 ka 400,000 300,000 200,000 100,000 today

Two other attempts at explaining the Eccentricity Enigma Peter Clark: switch from 41 ka to 100 ka resulted from change at bed of ice sheets basal melting: the more there is, the faster the glacier slides

Rate of glacier sliding (hence rate of mass transfer) depends on temperature and pressure at bed swisseduc.ch Canadian Rockies glacier movement = sliding at bed + internal deformation

Decaying radioactive isotopes in Earth generate heat flow = 1/10 W per m 2 on average over continental crust swisseduc.ch East Antarctic: heated from below and piling up

The thicker the ice, the greater its basal pressure, and the more heat it retains from geothermal heat flux swisseduc.ch regelation ice at base of Swiss glacier

Basal melt fraction Marshall and Clark (2002) Geophys Res Lett: Basal temperature evolution of North American ice sheets and implications for the 100-kyr cycle Ice sheet thickening

While we cannot make firm conclusions without a rigorous model of basal flow processes*, these results clearly suggest the potential for increased dynamical activity of the North American ice sheets in response to this thermal evolution.

100,000-yr period is determined by an autogenic, glaciological time keeper ice sheet evolves towards faster and faster sliding velocity: termination approaches! Marshall and Clark (2002) course of glaciation

And there are more Peter Huybers (2009) Pleistocene glacial variability as a chaotic response to obliquity forcing. Climates of the Past 5, 481-488.

Lecture 12. the Eccentricity Enigma: Still unresolved Answer would help us understand how the Earth s climate system works