1 / 46

Ice Ages and Climate Change

Ice Ages and Climate Change. Chestnut Ridge, NY Jan 23 in the year 16,004 BC. Four questions of climate change. What are ice ages? How do we know there were ice ages, and when did they occur in the past? How do we get an ice age? What can we expect in the future?.

topaz
Download Presentation

Ice Ages and Climate Change

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ice Ages and Climate Change Chestnut Ridge, NY Jan 23 in the year 16,004 BC

  2. Four questions of climate change • What are ice ages? • How do we know there were ice ages, and when did • they occur in the past? • How do we get an ice age? • What can we expect in the future?

  3. How do we know there were ice ages?

  4. Modern Climate Records What is climate anyway? -Weather average >30 years Central England Air Temperature 1659-Present What other records are there?

  5. Historical Records of Climate Painting of Winter on the frozen Thames River, London Grove, 1988

  6. Agricultural Records • Ripening of grapes depends strongly on climate • Cold years delay harvest date

  7. Geologic records of climate Land-based evidence of glaciers 2. Deep sea sediments 3. Present ice sheets

  8. Land Records: Moraines

  9. Glacial “Erratics” Some rocks have been transported far enough by glaciers that they no longer look like nearby bedrock

  10. Glacial depositsin areas notcurrently glaciated Laurentide ice sheet 18,000 years ago

  11. Louis Agassiz A Swiss zoologist and paleontologist at the Swiss Academy of Natural Sciences In 1837 he proposed that the presence of moraines and erratics were evidence that glaciers once existed where they are no longer found today…. and the science of reconstructing ancient climate was born!

  12. Evidence for more than one ice age! Can’t we get any more detailed than this? Penck and Brueckner, 1909

  13. Climate records from the ocean:Sediment cores These are vertical sections of mud and sand taken from the ocean floor. Everything that lives in the ocean eventually winds up on the sea floor Fine clay and the sand-sized skeletons of plankton make up most of the material on the sea floor.

  14. Ocean Sediment Cores Cores at Deep Sea Sample Repository at Lamont-Doherty Observatory

  15. What is in a sediment core? Sand grains of quartz and other minerals. Volcanic ash from local eruptions. Plus clay, clay and more clay! Bond et al. (1997)

  16. Shells of single-celled organisms called Foraminifera

  17. Why are ocean sediment cores great climate records? • They are continuous records • They are datable by a variety of techniques • They are available for many time periods • They can be very detailed!

  18. Chemistry of foraminifera in marine sediments depends on water temperature! Emiliani, 1955

  19. 800,000 years of glacial cycles This is from marine sediment cores

  20. Climate of the last 2.5 million years

  21. Ice Cores Sections of ice from the Antarctic Ice Sheet provide a climate record stretching back to 420,000 years.

  22. Ice Ages are Global Both northern and southern ice sheets experienced glacial cycles SIMULTANEOUSLY.

  23. How do we get an ice age? Before we can answer this question, we must know: Why is the temperature of the Earth what it is?

  24. What determines Earth’s temperature? • The balance between incoming and outgoing solar energy • The Greenhouse Effect keeps Earth’s temperature livable.

  25. Carbon dioxide matches glacial cycles!

  26. Solar radiation and glacial cycles

  27. Ice Sheets, the key to ice ages Ice sheets can CAUSE global climate change 1. Bright ice reflects solar radiation, leading to cooling and more ice growth. 2. Cooling the ocean surface causes it to absorb Carbon Dioxide (CO2). Carbon dioxide is one of the most important gases that create the greenhouse effect. Scientists have reasoned that it is possible to cause a global ice age by building an ice sheet in northeastern Canada. These are called climate FEEDBACK MECHANISMS

  28. How on Earth do you build an ice sheet?

  29. Changes in the Earth’s orbit Minimize summer warmth to promote ice sheet growth!

  30. What about future ice ages?

  31. Changes in the greenhouse effect may result from industrial activity

  32. Can climate change happen quickly? • Many places are warmed by • ocean currents • If these warm ocean currents • were diverted or shut off, • the eastern US and Europe • would cool

  33. Great Ocean Conveyor

  34. What controls recent climate?The Sun! Black: Climate in the North Atlantic region Blue: Solar activity

  35. to summarize… 1. Global ice ages have come and gone regularly for almost 3 million years. 2. Geologic records such as sediment cores reveal climate history 3. Formation of large ice sheets is necessary to cause global cooling 4. Changes in the seasonal input of solar energy allow ice to grow 5. Ice ages may happen in the future, but changes in the atmosphere caused by humans may alter the timing. 6. Small but important climate change may happen quickly. Understanding how climate works on short time scales is the major goal of current research.

  36. Ice ages and human migration Matsch, 1976 Lister and Bahn, 1994

  37. Annual layers in ancient records

  38. Ice extent during peak of last glacial period

  39. What determines Earth’s temperature?

  40. Where do you find interesting cores? RV Maurice Ewing, of Columbia University Ship’s track from a voyage in 1998.

  41. Solar energy reaching a point on Earth varies through time Laskar 1993 data set

More Related