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1 Climate Change: Impacts and Responses Topic 3: Climate Change in the Distant Past: Palaeoclimatology 2 Topic outline UN Photo credits: Evan Schneider, Mark Garten, Martine Perret, Olga Lavrushko, Robert Clamp 1. Introduction 2. Types of climatic data for analysing past climates (direct and proxy indicators) 3. Past climate change: evidence from proxy data 4. Causes of climate change in the past and the last 2,000 years 3 Learning outcomes for this topic Name sources of proxy climate data Describe the factors which have caused shifts in climate in the past Describe the characteristics of past climate change on Earth Demonstrate an understanding of climate change today within the context of Earth’s prevailing climate over the past two thousand years Debate the importance of recent climate change relative to the climate record of the distant past 4 Section 1: Introduction 5 Outline: Introduction Why study climate in the past? Climatic data Climate data from proxies 6 Why study climate in the distant past? To understand how Earth’s climate can change To develop theories to explain climate changes To build and test climate models To predict future climate change Fig SMP-01(a), IPCC AR5, 2013 7 Climatic data Image: NASA Earth Observatory Direct measurements: From 1850s onwards – fairly reliable climate data recorded (from 1970s onwards climate data also recorded by satellites) Indirect measurements Prior to 1850s we need to use proxy data 8 Climate data from proxies Proxy data are clues that enable scientists to reconstruct past climates. They come from indicators which record climatic variation. Important indicators: Historical records, natural phenomena, materials and radioactive isotopes trapped in ice or sediment. Important sources: Tree rings, corals, ice cores, lake and ocean sediments, boreholes and mountain glaciers. Challenges posed by proxy data: less precise than instrumental measurements, regionally specific nature and uneven distribution. Image: “Glaciers in Bhutan-Himalaya.”, NASA Earth Observatory 9 Section 2: Types of proxy data 10 Outline: Types of proxy data Tree rings Corals Ice cores Sediments Borehole measurements Mountain glacial moraines 11 The study of tree rings: Dendrochronology Tree trunk crosssections display patterns of tree rings which relate to annual growing conditions (temperature and water availability) and other events such as floods and fires Pinus ponderosa trunk showing flood damage. Photo: Dr Henri D. Grissini-Meyer Tree rings can provide climate records going back 5,000 years for some species 12 Corals Image: Owen Sherwood/www.noaa.gov Annual growth rings Record of several hundred years Tropical and subtropical range Useful source of information about effects such as El Niño events in the Pacific Information about past temperatures and levels of ocean salinity 13 Ice cores Cylindrical samples of ice mainly from Antarctica and Greenland Up to 800,000 years old Temporal resolution is depth dependent, with annual/seasonal resolution at shallower depths Ice formation and inclusions such as air bubbles Sampling past atmospheric concentrations, temperatures, wind, volcanic eruptions etc... Image: Lonnie Thompson/NOAA Image: Mike Dunn, NOAA 14 Sediments (lakes, oceans and continental coastlines) Image: “Sediment of the Yucatan Peninsular”, NASA Earth Observatory Lakes: annual Oceans: multidecadal or century Record goes back millennia Information about past sea temperatures, salinity, acidity, ice volumes, sea levels, river outflows, aridity and vegetation characteristics 15 Borehole measurements Reconstructed global ground temperature estimate from borehole data over the past five centuries, relative to present day. Image created by Global Warming Art (after Huang & Pollack, 1998) Temperature profiles within boreholes are measured Greater depths represent older temperatures Decreasing temporal resolution occurs with increasing depth 16 Mountain glacial moraines Glaciers move through landscapes leaving characteristic rocky debris known as moraines. Moraines enable scientists to measure the maximum length of glaciers and deduce information about temperature and precipitation Such measurements can be accurate to the decade and records going back millennia can be constructed Image: NASA Earth Observatory 17 Time span of climatic records and methods of dating NOAA Palaeoclimatology program Radiocarbon dating can be useful for materials that are up to about 50,000 years old but dating can only be accurate to a few percent of the age of the material Further back, Uranium isotopes can be used but resolution is lower still Uncertainty about dates highlights the importance of corroborating findings between multiple proxies 18 Past climate change: Evidence from proxy data Image created by Robert A. Rohde / Global Warming Art 19 Section 3: Past climates 20 Outline: Past climates Geologic time and palaeoclimatic events Pre-Quaternary palaeocene/Eocene (PETM) Mid-Pliocene Quaternary Holocene 21 Geologic time and palaeoclimatic events Quaternary Pre-Quaternary http://www.rocksinmyheadtoo.com/TimeLine.htm 22 Geologic time and palaeoclimatic events http://www.rocksinmyheadtoo.com/TimeLine.htm 65 million years: most of the useful proxy data comes from this period 23 Pre-Quaternary IPCC 2007, Figure 6.1 CO₂ levels over the last 4 million years have varied in line with continental glaciation CO₂ levels coincide with temperatures and glaciation. Over the last 65 million years, deep ocean temperatures fell overall Antarctic and Northern Hemisphere ice sheet formation have occurred within the last 35 million years 24 Palaeocene/Eocene (PETM) IPCC 2007, figure 6.2 Abrupt warming of the ocean by 5°C over a period of 1,000 to 10,000 years 55 million years ago Large carbon flux into the atmosphere and ocean This carbon was absorbed by the ocean which made it acidic and dissolved seafloor carbonates. This is evidenced by a break in their presence in sediment cores. 25 Mid-Pliocene Difference between mid-Pliocene and pre-industrial climate, as modelled using PRISM2 palaeoenvironmental reconstructions and the Hadley Centre atmospheric GCM. Most recent period of sustained warmer temperatures Greater warming at high latitudes Higher sea levels and changes to ecosystem distributions http://www.bgs.ac.uk/research/climatechange/palaeo/computer_modelling.html 26 Quaternary Variations in a proxy for temperature (δD) and atmospheric concentration of C02 (red), CH4 (blue) and N20 (green) Figure 6.3, IPCC 2007 27 Holocene McMichael A J PNAS 2012;109:4730-4737 PNAS (National Academy of Science) 28 Section 4: Causes of climate change in the past 29 Outline: Causes of climate change in the past Abrupt climate change: Younger Dryas Causes of past Ice Ages Palaeo-records in Africa The last 2,000 years 30 Abrupt climate change: the Younger Dryas Best known example of abrupt climate change (occurring over decades) Sudden drop back to near glacial conditions during the warming transition into the Holocene Probably caused by massive influx of meltwater from melting ice sheets resulting in a temporary reduction in the thermohaline circulation Image: www.ncdc.noaa.gov 31 Causes of past ice ages Ice ages first hypothesised in 19th Century based on evidence from glacial moraines Theories developed by James Croll and then Milutin Milankovitch linking ice ages to orbital forcing Feedback mechanisms amplify this to ultimately affect Earth’s climate over tens of thousands of years. Next ice age predicted to occur in 30,000 years, but may not operate as expected due to impacts of anthropogenic climate change Milutin Milankovitch IPCC 2007 James Croll Artist’s impression of last glacial maximum, Based on: Crowley, Thomas J. (1995). 32 Palaeo records in Africa 0 Willis K J et al. Phil. Trans. R. Soc. B 2013;368:20120491 33 The last two thousand years Proxy-based reconstructions of Northern Hemisphere surface temperature variations over the past two millennia Image: Mann et al, 2008 34 Summary Reconstructions of past climate change illustrate what is possible within Earth’s climate system, and over what time periods Throughout the climate record the close association of atmospheric green house gas concentrations with temperature is evident Abrupt climate change has occurred before and a possible cause is the influx of melt-water to the ocean from melting ice sheets 35 References Alley, R.B., A.J. Gow, S.J. Johnsen, J. Kipfstuhl, D.A. Meese, and Th. Thorsteinsson. (1995). Comparison of deep ice cores. Nature 373:393-394. Folland, C.K., T.R. Karl, J.R. Christy, R.A. Clarke, G.V. Gruza, J. Jouzel, M.E. Mann, J. Oerlemans, M.J. Salinger and S.W. Wang (2001). Observed Climate Variability and Change. In: Climate Change 2001: The Scientific Basis. Contribution of Working Group I to the Third Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change [Houghton, J.T., Y. Ding, D.J. Griggs, M. Noguer, P.J. van der Linden, X. Dai, K. Maskell, and C.A. Johnson (eds.)]. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom and New York, NY, USA, 881pp Huang, S.P., and H.N. Pollack, (1998). Global Borehole Temperature Database for Climate Reconstruction. IGBP PAGES/World Data Center-A for Paleoclimatology Data Contribution Series #1998-044, NOAA/NGDC Paleoclimatology Program, Boulder, CO. Huang, S, H Pollack & P-Y Shen (2000). Temperature trends over the past five centuries recenstructued from borehole temperatures. Nature, vol 403(6771), 756–758 Jansen, E., J.Overpeck, K.R. Briffa, J.-C. Duplessy, F. Joos, V. Masson-Delmotte, D. Olago, B. Otto-Bliesner, W.R. Peltier, S. Rahmstorm, R.Ramesh, D. Raynaud, D. Rind, O. Solomina, R. Vilalba and D. Zhang (2007). Palaeoclimate. In: Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis. Contribution of Working Group I to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change [Solomon, S., D. Qin, M. Manning, Z. Chen, M. Marquis, K.B. Averyt, M. Tignor and H.L. Miller (eds.)] Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom and New York, NY, USA McMichael, A.J. (2012). Insights from past millennia into climatic impacts on human health and survival. PNAS 2012 109 (13) 47304737; published ahead of print February 6, 2012,doi:10.1073/pnas.1120177109 Mann, M.E., Z. Zhang, M.K. Hughes, R.S. Bradley, S.K. Miller, S. Rutherford, and F. Ni (2008). Proxy-based reconstructions of hemispheric and global surface temperature variations over the past two millennia. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Vol. 105, No. 36, pp. 13252-13257, September 9, 2008. doi:10.1073/pnas.0805721105 Riebeek, H. (2005). Paleoclimatology: Introduction. Available at: http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Features/Paleoclimatology/ Willis K. J., K. D. Bennett, S. L. Burrough, M. Macias-Fauria, and C. Tover (2013). Review article: Determining the response of African biota to climate change: using the past to model the future. Phil. Trans. R. Soc. B 368:1625 Online resources: http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/data-access/paleoclimatology-data/datasets/climate-reconstruction http://web.utk.edu/~grissino/ 36 Suggested reading Dendrochronology (tree rings): http://web.utk.edu/~grissino/resources.htm#educ 37 End of Topic 3: Climate Change in the Distant Past: Palaeoclimatology Next Topic: Climate Change in the Recent Past