* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download IAN MILLER: Longterm_Role_carbon
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Plankton, and Plants, and Tectonics! Oh My! The role of the longterm carbon cycle in Earth’s climate. Ian M. Miller Curator of Paleontology DMNS WIPS March Meeting, 2008 Earth’s Climate The average of weather and the combination of… Solar Energy (distance from the Sun, intensity) Atmosphere (composition & currents) Oceans (composition, currents, & geology) Ice (extent on land and sea) Continents (location, elevation, & geology) Plants & Animals (on land & in the seas) Climate Change At four (or five) time scales… Modern time: Anthropocene (last ~200 yrs—industrialization) Holocene (last ~10,000 yrs—human civilization) Deep Time: Pleistocene (last ~1.8 million yrs—icehouse) Previous 4.5 by (almost always a greenhouse) Phanerozoic (542 Ma to ~10 Ka) Climate Change At three scales of climatic cycles… Geologic: Long-term carbon cycle (millions of yrs) Milankovitch: Earth’s orbital dynamics (400,000, 100,000, 40,000, and 20,000 Ka) Sub-Milankovitch: (amplify longer cycles) Short-term carbon cycle (~100’s to 1,000’s yrs) Solar/Sunspot cycles (~10’s to ~1000’s yrs) Climatic oscillations (2-7 yrs: El Nino La Nina) Climate Oscillations: Climate Oscillations: During “Normal Years” or La Nina Warm water in the western Pacific causes low pressure and high rainfall; pressure system drives tradewinds from east to west; tradewinds drive warm water to the west; causing cold water to rise off South America and flow west. South America Climate Oscillations: During “El Nino” Warm water shift to the eastern Pacific causes drought in western Pacific; low pressure over the warm eastern Pacific causes heavy rains and inhibits upwelling along the coast of South America. South America The Ice Record: Milankovitch Orbital Eccentricity (~100,000 yr cycle) Orbital Tilt (~41,000 yr cycle) Orbital Precession (~23,000 yr cycle) The Ice Record: Milankovitch The Ice Record: Milankovitch Brook, 2008 Nature Carbon THE greenhouse gas The Ice Record: Milankovitch Brook, 2008 Nature Short-term carbon cycle: ~10’s to 1000’s of years Respiration: CH2O + O2 → CO2 + H2O + energy Photosynthesis: CO2 + H2O + light energy → CH2O + O2 Icehouse Earth Sea Ice Continental Ice at the poles Green River Fm: Greenhouse World Courtesy K. Johnson Courtesy K. Johnson Fossil Lotus Courtesy K. Johnson Living Lotus Courtesy K. Johnson Lowland rainforest, Panama Lomonosov Ridge Azolla (floating fern) The Arctic Sea 50 million years ago Courtesy K. Johnson Geologic cycles: Climate through the Phanerozoic— carbon is the culprit Royer et al., 2003 Long-term Carbon Cycle: rocks Two generalized reactions… Photosynthesis/Respiration CO2 + H20 ↔ CH2O + O2 Weathering/Precipitation CO2 + CaSiO3 ↔ CaCO3 + SiO2 Long-term carbon cycle: rocks Berner, 2001 A Carbon Thermostat • Fluxes in and out of the major reservoirs are relatively constant leading to an equilibrium in atmospheric CO2—there are negligible changes in fluxes during the Pleistocene. A Carbon Thermostat • Fluxes in and out of the major reservoirs are relatively constant leading to an equilibrium in atmospheric CO2—there are negligible changes in fluxes during the Pleistocene. • In geologic time, negative feedbacks serve to regulate the equilibrium. – High CO2, more warming, more plant growth, less CO2, less warming… No sinks: Runaway Greenhouse Effect • 97% carbon dioxide • 3% nitrogen • Water & sulfuric acid clouds • Temperature: >800°F – more than twice as hot as Mercury Venus No sources: Snowball Earth ~650 Ma Long-term carbon cycle: sinks Berner, 2001 Photosynthesis (sink): CO2 + H2O + light energy → CH2O + O2 Swamp Forests of the Paleozoic Photosynthesis (sink): CO2 + H2O + light energy → CH2O + O2 Weathering (sink): CO2 + CaSiO3 → CaCO3 + SiO2 Precipitation (sink): CO2 + CaSiO3 → CaCO3 + SiO2 Precipitation (sink): CO2 + CaSiO3 → CaCO3 + SiO2 Long-term carbon cycle: sources Berner, 2001 Georespiration (oxidation, source): CH2O + O2 → CO2 + H2O Georespiration (thermal decomposition): CH2O + O2 → CO2 + H2O Georespiration (thermal decomposition): CH2O + O2 → CO2 + H2O Georespiration (mantle source): CH2O + O2 → CO2 + H2O Long-term carbon cycle: sources and sinks Berner, 2001 How do long-term carbon flux changes alter the climate? • The ice age and the oxygen maximum during the Late Carboniferous. • Draw down of CO2 leading up to the Pleistocene minimum. Climate and Carbon through the Phanerozoic. Royer et al., 2003 Paleozoic Swamp Forests CO2 and O2 through the Phanerozoic Berner, 2003 Extant Dragonfly Permian Dragonfly Climate and Carbon through the Phanerozoic. Royer et al., 2003 Subduction (source) then Weathering (sink) Subduction then Uplift Cenozoic Deep Sea Climate Record Time, Ma The Ice Record Brook, 2008 Nature IPCC 2001 Temperature Curve Georespiration (thermal decomposition): CH2O + O2 → CO2 + H2O >100 times faster than volcanoes Berner, 2001 1946 – 1950 svs.gsfc.nasa.gov 1956 - 1960 Temperature svs.gsfc.nasa.gov 1966 - 1970 Temperature svs.gsfc.nasa.gov 1976 - 1980 Temperature svs.gsfc.nasa.gov 1986 - 1990 Temperature svs.gsfc.nasa.gov 1996 - 2000 Temperature svs.gsfc.nasa.gov 2002 - 2006 Temperature svs.gsfc.nasa.gov Minimum Sea 1979 Ice 1979 September, Minimum Sea 2005 Ice 2005 September, September, 2007 The Long-term carbon cycle and Earths climate: Carbon cycles: Long-term carbon cycle (millions of yrs) Driver of long-term climate changes Responsible for Icehouses/Greenhouses Short-term carbon cycle (~100’s to 1,000’s yrs) May exacerbate short-lived climate events e.g. Milankovitch cycles Doesn’t play a role in long-term climate Long-term carbon cycle and today: Burning fossil fuels is like setting off volcanoes >100 times faster than present eruptions rates Running a global experiment, which in not analogous to glacial-interglacials.