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Past climates NGEN03 HT-2014 This module has emphases on: 1. The Quaternary Period and Quaternary geology (incl. the Holocene epoch). 2. Reconstructions of glacial/interglacial cycles and changes in the size of major carbon reservoirs. 3. Feedbacks in the climate system and non-linear responses. Mats Rundgren, Nov. 2014, based on Ian Snowball, Nov. 2012 Cover of Science magazine, April 27th 2001. In 1565, Pieter Bruegel the Elder painted this frigid northern European landscape in his work Hunters in the Snow. Much of the discussion about contemporary climate change concerns whether or not the observed warming of the 20th century was part of a ”natural recovery” from the Little Ice Age. How many ”big” and ”little ice ages” have there been and how often do they occur? How do we know about them? Is contemporary climate change different to past (natural) climate change? Snowball Earth: an extreme example of positive feedback in the climate system Earth’s climate system and interaction of components © M. Calner, Lund University The natural thermostat… …is driven by the Earth’s endogenic processes and the carbonate-silicate cycle …two main processes control the concentration of CO2 in the atmopshere Uplift weathering hypothesis Chemical weathering of carbonate and silicate rocks Cooling effect BLAG hypothesis Volcanism Warming effect Atmospheric reservoir = CO 2 -2 Ocean reservoir = -CO3 CO2 Ocean Land reservoir = living organisms Earth’s crust = calcium carbonate, fossil fuels © M. Calner, Lund University The natural thermostat… BLAG-hypothesis (1983): Plate tectonic processes drive the climate system over timescales of hundreds of million years …CO2 is released from bedrock and put into the atmosphere through two tectonic processes 2. Along subduction zones 1. Along midocean ridges Ocean floor spreading: The rate of spreading controls the rate of release of CO2 into the atmosphere © M. Calner, Lund University The natural thermostat… Hydrolysis: 80 % of the 0.15 Gt C which is deposited in the ocean each year Calcium carbonate rich sediments in the Pacific Ocean, near Honolulu (IODP) Si4+ HCO3- Ca2+ © M. Calner, Lund University The natural thermostat… Long term reduction in atmospheric CO2 concentration over the last 500 million years is due to the net production of carbonate rocks Orbital parameters and continental configuration: the last 70 Ma Long term climate development involves changes in: 1. Tectonics and the positions of the continents 2. Ocean circulation 3. Orbital parameters 4. Evolution in the biosphere Published by AAAS J. Zachos et al., Science 292, 686-693 (2001) Global temperature, major climatic, tectonic and biotic events: the last 70 Ma Temperature of the deep ocean Published by AAAS J. Zachos et al., Science 292, 686 -693 (2001) The Quaternary world What is the “Quaternary?” • The Quaternary: – is the most recent major subdivision (period) of the geological record. It includes the present day and, most likely, the near future. – is synonymous with the label “Ice-age.” – has lasted c. 2.6 million years, so far. – Note that tectonic processes are of minor importance What caused the start of the Quaternary? Closing of the Central American isthmus was complete 4 Myr ago. Although the northwards flow of warm, salty water warmed the northern regions, it also transported more moisture, which was needed to produce the continental ice sheets. Ice-sheets have a high albedo, and promote a cool regional climate. A positive feedback. Quaternary ice-sheets in the Northern Hemisphere Position at the last glacial maximum (LGM) at c. 20 Kyr Tundra in central Europe and a very different mammalian fauna North-south migration of vegetation during the Quaternary How do we know? Quaternary Geology Why? 1. Meteorite? 2. Flood? 3. Humans? 4. Ice! Different geological archives of the Quaternary world • Q. What is a geological archive? – In the best case, an easily dated continuous, “natural” record of past environmental changes, where events can be placed in stratigraphic (temporal) order. – A geological archive contains so-called “proxy indicators”, where inferences must be made on the premise of “the present is the key to the past”. Common examples of “proxies” Direct, “First Order” proxies of an environmental, or climatic, parameter: 1. Concentration of atmospheric gas (e.g. CO2, CH4) found in a bubble of air enclosed in old ice. Indirect, “Second Order” proxies of an environmental or climatic parameter: 1. Ratio of stable isotopes, e.g. 18O/16O found in ancient ice stored in ice-sheets. A measure of isotopic fractionation, which is controlled by temperature at the time of evaporation and condensation, plus the ratio of the moisture source. 2. Abundance of pollen grains in lake sediments and ratios between different species. A proxy for the composition of past vegetation communities, controlled by (for example) temperature, precipitation and more recently, human impact. 3. The abundance of ice-rafted-debris (IRD) in ocean sediments. A proxy for the abundance of icebergs. Quaternary records of global change: 1. Deep-sea sediments Ocean sediment layers extend further back in time than most lake sediment sequences and ice cores. Studies of the oxygen isotope composition of fossil foraminifera deposited on the ocean floor produced a new picture of how the Earth’s climate varied during the Quaternary period. Details later Quaternary records of global change: 2. Ice-cores (e.g. Greenland & Antarctica) Photos: NEEM ice core drilling project, www.neem.ku.dk . Ice core stratigraphy The ice cores have provided: 1. Records of atmospheric gas concentrations over glacial cycles. 2. Records of (sub) millennial-scale climate change within the glacial and interglacial stages. Ice core stratigraphy The lowermost sections of the GISP2 ice core. At a depth of 3053.51 m the drill struck the basal rock, having collected a 200,000 year long record of the Earth's atmospheric composition. Ice-core record Marine record The last glacial-interglacial cycle Quaternary records of global change: 3. Continental lake sediments Lake sediment record of the Holocene Lake Windermere, UK Today Early Holocene Younger Dryas stadial Bølling/Allerød interstadial Glacial Quaternary records of global change: 4. Tree rings Dendrochronology in northern Sweden: the last 7400 years Fossil trees were found in lakes and peat bogs. Through cross-correlation of 880 sampled trees a 7400 year chronology has been constructed. Summer temperatures for the last 7,400 years in northern Sweden based on dendrochronology (Grudd et al. 2002) Quaternary stratigraphy & correlation Stratigraphy Biostratigraphy: = observable variations in fossil content Climatostratigraphy = geological-climatic units based on inference from, for example, fossil content Chronostratigraphy = Classification of stratigraphic units according to inferred, relative or absolute age The detail and complexity of Quaternary archives has lead to problems of classification, interpretation and correlation that are not encountered in investigations of the earlier geological record. Quaternary stratigraphy & correlation Quaternary climatostratigraphy = Glacials = Long (several 10,000 years) cold phases characterized by major expansions of continental ice sheets and glaciers (e.g Weichselian, the last glaciation). Interglacials = Warm intervals separating glacial phases. Climate similar or warmer than present (e.g Eemian, the last interglacial). Stadials = Relatively short-lived cold episodes within glacials (e.g. Younger Dryas). Interstadials = Relatively short-lived warm episodes within glacials. Climate not as warm as during interglacials (e.g. Allerød). The Younger Dryas in the North Atlantic region as defined by: Morphological evidence: Biostratigraphy: Climatostratigraphy: Using isotopes to reveal global cycles and climate change Two molecules of a particular compound that contain different isotopes of a given element behave differently as they flow through the Earth system Fractionation between isotopes can be caused by, for example. Photosynthesis, Temperature, Evaporation. The most commonly used isotopes in studies of the Quaternary period are those of oxygen and carbon. A marine oxygen isotope record How was this record constructed, and how is it interpreted? Oxygen isotope stratigraphy Why measure the ratio between different oxygen isotopes? 1. 16O and 18O are non-radioactive “stable” isotopes of oxygen that occur naturally in Earth’s air and water. 2. 16O forms 99.8 % of all the oxygen present on Earth. 3. Measuring the ratios in marine carbonates and ice-cores provides information on fractionation, 4. The fractionation values reflect past temperatures AND ice volumes. “Light” oxygen-16, with 8 protons and 8 neutrons, is the most common isotope found in nature, followed by much lesser amounts of “heavy” oxygen-18, with 8 protons and 10 neutrons. Oxygen isotope stratigraphy 1. The average ratio of 18O to 16O is about 1/500 (0.002) 2. Small variations around this average are measured and reported as departures (in ‰) from a standard: δ18O = 1000 x 18O/16O sample – 18O/16O 18O/16O standard standard Why? Present day 18O values: Oxygen isotope stratigraphy 4. During glacials, large amounts of 16O were locked in ice sheets, so that the oceans were relatively enriched in 18O. 3. Thus, polar ice sheets have more negative, isotopically lighter 18O values than equatorial waters. “lighter” values “heavier” values 2. Successive condensation during transport to higher latitudes (and into continental interiors). Preferential loss of H218O. 1. Evaporation of water at the sea surface. The lighter H216O molecules are drawn into the atmosphere in preference to the heavier H218O molecules. The principle Kurt Hollocher, 2002 Oxygen isotope stratigraphy The 18O values of carbonate in marine organisms, such as shells of planktonic and benthic Foraminifera are dependent on two main factors. 1. Temperature at the time of secretion, c. 0.230/00 per 1oC. 2. Isotopic composition of seawater at the time of secretion. C. Emeliani (1955) measured stratigraphic changes in the isotopic composition of planktonic Foraminifera. He estimated glacial/interglacial changes of 6 oC. BUT, he underestimated the effect of global ice volume on the isotopic composition. Oxygen isotope stratigraphy Using more detailed and revised estimates of the isotopic composition of ice volumes, Shackleton (1967) measured benthic Foraminifera and showed that the 18O values were providing a record of ice-volume, NOT temperature. This work gave birth to Marine Isotope Stages – MIS, or Oxygen Isotope – OI stages where c. 104 Quaternary stages have been identified (52 glacial/interglacial cycles). OI stage 1 = the warm Holocene, OI stage 2 = cold Last Glacial Maximum etc. Marine isotope stratigraphy Glacial stage = isotopically heavy ocean + 1-1.5 per mil Interglacial stage = isotopically light ocean ~0 per mil Oxygen isotope stratigraphy The SPECMAP timescale: Imbrie et al. 1984. Orbital tuning of the oxygen isotope stages, via independently K/Ar dated palaeomagnetic tie points lead to the construction of a globally applicable oxygen isotope stratigraphy. I II III IV V VI VII “Saw-tooth” pattern of slow growth of ice sheets (and lowering of sea-level) followed by rapid decreases, so-called “Terminations”. What mechanism paces the ice ages? A marine oxygen isotope record So, can you spot what is wrong with this figure…..? MARGO Project Members*. Constraints on the magnitude and patterns of ocean cooling at the Last Glacial Maximum. Nature Geoscience 2, 127 - 132 (2009). NH summer NH winter Annual What theory of climate change does geological data test? A valid, or proven, theory must explain: 1. 2. 3. repeated glaciations in both hemispheres global synchronicity rhythmic behaviour The Astronomical Theory of the Ice-Ages The Astronomical Theory of the Ice-Ages James Croll: argued that the total amount of insolation received at a given latitude in a given season could vary significantly from year to year because of changes in the Earth's orbit. He also understood that “feedback” mechanisms were necessary to amplify the insolation changes within the climate system. Photograph of James Croll from J. C. Irons (1896). Three basic orbital parameters What are they? 1. Eccentricity 2. Tilt (Obliquity) 3. Precession of the equinoxes The Astronomical Theory of the Ice-Ages 1. Eccentricity - 100,000 & 413,000 years Earth’s orbit around the Sun is elliptical, not circular. The “degree” of eccentricity varies between є = 0.005 0.0607. It is only the eccentricity of Earth’s orbit that can change the total amount of solar radiation reaching the surface. (apart from changes in the solar ”constant”) The Astronomical Theory of the Ice-Ages 2. Tilt, or Obliquity - 41,000 years Earth’s rotational (spin) axis is currently tilted 23.5o away from a line perpendicular to the plane of its orbit around the Sun. Changes in tilt affect the degree of seasonality. The Astronomical Theory of the Ice-Ages 3. Precession of the equinoxes – 23,000 years E.g. Now Perihelion occurs just after the N. Hemisphere winter solstice (when the N. Pole points away from the Sun) Sometimes in the past Perihelion occurred during the N. Hemisphere summer solstice, thereby increasing seasonality. Perihelion = when the Earth is closest to the Sun. Aphelion = when the Earth is furthest from the Sun. The Astronomical Theory of the Ice-Ages Milutin Milankovitch This Serbian geophysicist finally was able to include the effect of changes in obliquity in the calculations. He calculated summer radiation curves for the key latitudes of 55o, 60o, and 65o N that seemed to correlate well with evidence then available from the geologic record. Milutin Milankovitch by Paja Jovanovic (1943). The Astronomical Theory of the Ice-Ages The combination of cycles Back to carbon and CO2 Note the dust record Revealing changes in the carbon cycle: the geological perspective 1. Long-term evolution of atmospheric CO2 concentration, 2. Changes in the size of carbon reservoirs. A long term record of atmospheric CO2 concentration An estimate of the changes of CO2 concentration during the Phanerozoic (the last 600 million years). Devonian and Carboniferous reduction caused by significantly increased weathering rates. Forests adapted to inhabit upland environments. What is this long term trend due to? Q. Where did this carbon go? A. It formed the fossil fuels that humans are burning today. The main “modern” carbon reservoirs The largest reservoir of carbon is that composed of sediments and rocks This carbon is not necessarily “buried forever”! “Modern” fluxes of carbon On the other hand, the fastest rates of carbon cycling occur between vegetation/soil and the atmosphere. These rates vary over geological time. Which rates have human activity accelerated? Quaternary variations in the carbon cycle The changing atmospheric concentration of CO2 shows that large changes in carbon storage took place during the glacial cycles. ~ 90 ppm drop in atmospheric CO2 during the glacials. What explanations are there? 1. Colder sea surface water absorbs CO2 more effectively than warmer water. 2. But, saltier sea surface water absorbs CO2 less effectively than less salty water. The net effect can only account for 11 ppm of the ~ 90 ppm difference! Where does the carbon go? Carbon cycle Interglacial to glacial values of carbon stored in the mobile reservoirs (in gigatons). Quaternary variations in the carbon cycle Terrestrial data show a tremendous reduction (25 %) of C in vegetation and soil during glacial stages. But, atmospheric CO2 concentrations went down: this carbon did not go into the atmosphere. It must have gone into the ocean. 1. The surface ocean is almost in equilibrium with the atmosphere on glacial timescales. 2. The deep ocean most likely stored an extra 1010 gigatons of carbon during glacial stages. 3. This value represents only a 2.7 % increase in the deep ocean, compared to interglacials. Carbon cycle The ocean carbon pump hypothesis (Wally Broecker). Glacial stages are characterised by higher ocean productivity due to: 1. Nutrients supplied from the land in the form of dust (iron fertilization). 2. Increased winds cause the upwelling of nutrient-rich waters, 3. Changes in deep water circulation. One way to test the sensitivity of the climate system to different CO2 and CH4 concentration scenarios is to let them happen. But, there is only one Earth, so only one scenario can be tested. We can try to constrain the predictions of climate models by using ’palaeodata’. What are the problems in this approach? End