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Millennial-Scale Oscillations

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Followed by ice-rafting. Icebergs were dumped into N. Atlantic from Iceland every 1,500 years ... NADW slowed particularly during major ice-rafting events ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Millennial-Scale Oscillations


1
Millennial-Scale Oscillations
  • Many are rapid enough to affect human life spans
  • Largest and best defined during glaciations
  • Present in d18O and dust records in Greenland ice
    core
  • d18O fluctuations of 5-6
  • Large compared with overall variations
  • Negative d18O match increase in dust content
  • Oscillations referred to as Dansgaard-Oeschger
    cycles

2
Millennial-Scale Oscillations
  • Apparent in the GRIP/GISP Greenland cores
  • Oscillations 2,000-3,000, some 5,000 years
  • Average is about 4,000 years
  • Dust apparently sourced from northern Asia
  • Size of dust large in cold intervals
  • More evidence for sea salt deposition when cold
  • Indicates winds were strong

3
Detecting and Dating Oscillations
  • Detecting millennial-scale oscillation relatively
    easy
  • Dating them is not
  • Dating is necessary for confirming correlations
  • Problems involved are twofold
  • Can the archive record millennial-scale
    oscillations?
  • Deep sea sediments deposited cm 1000 y-1
  • Typically easy with high sedimentary rates to
    show that oscillations exist
  • How accurately can the oscillations be dated?
  • Glacial age materials, uncertainly in 14C date
    about the length of the cycle
  • May be dated, cannot determine lead/lag
    relationship

4
Oscillations in N. Atlantic Sediments
  • High sedimentation rate drift deposits
  • Redistribution of fine sediments
  • Coarse foraminifera and ice rafted-debris settle
  • Revealed millennial-scale oscillations and ice
    rafting events
  • Called Heinrich events
  • Polar species and ice rafted debris indicated
  • Cold waters
  • Icebergs present
  • Match changes in d18O in Greenland ice

5
Heinrich Events
  • When Greenland became cold, dry and windy
  • North Atlantic ocean temperature decreased and
    icebergs were present
  • Dating sufficient over last 30K years to confirm
    correlation
  • Not sufficient to determine lead/lags
  • Pattern was slow cooling
  • Followed (typically) by ice-rafting event
  • Rapid warming after ice-rafting event

6
Source of Icebergs
  • Most ice rafted debris found 40-50N
  • Icebergs from northeastern margin of Laurentide
    ice sheet
  • Iceland
  • Northern Scotland
  • Earliest events not from Laurentide
  • Detailed study showed large increases in rate of
    deposition of ice-rafted debris
  • Not just decrease in deposition of foraminifera

7
Cycles or Oscillations?
  • Some feel represent true cycles of cooling
  • Followed by ice-rafting
  • Icebergs were dumped into N. Atlantic from
    Iceland every 1,500 years
  • Despite climatic conditions
  • At some point a threshold was reached
  • Triggered large influx of icebergs
  • Not all evidence has this regular pattern
  • Not all agrees with sense of cooling in Greenland

8
Support for Oscillations
  • Long cores from ODP
  • Document millennial-scale oscillations
  • During 100,000-year and 40,000-year glacial
    cycles
  • Benthic foraminifera show changes in d13C during
    younger oscillations
  • Suggest that during cooling episodes
  • NADW slowed particularly during major ice-rafting
    events
  • Oscillations occur in Greenland and N. Atlantic
  • Changes in air and surface-ocean temperatures
  • Ice sheet margins and ice rafting
  • In deep water formation

9
Changes in Ice Volume
  • If icebergs formed and melted
  • How did this affect total ice volume?
  • Oxygen isotope records in Pacific benthic
    foraminifera
  • Deposits sense global ice volume but not local
    ice melting
  • Show generally small variations (0.1)
  • Less than 10 m change in sea level
  • Gross changes in the size of ice sheets unlikely
    cause of oscillations

10
Millennial-Scale Changes in Europe
  • Greenland ice sheet temperatures correlate
  • European soil type
  • Warm intervals rich in clay and organic carbon
  • European pollen
  • Similar change to larger scale climate changes

11
Millennial-Scale Oscillations
  • Similar scale oscillations have been found
  • Northern hemisphere away from N. Atlantic
  • Southern hemisphere

12
A Global Cause?
  • Millennial-scale oscillation in Santa Barbara
    Basin
  • Match fluctuations in Greenland ice core
  • Warm intervals in Greenland match warm and
    productive intervals in California margin
    sediments
  • May indicate separate regional responses to more
    pervasive cause of climate change
  • Either hemispherical or global scale

13
Testing Global Signal
  • Evidence in S. hemisphere would strengthen
    interpretation
  • Antarctic ice core have short-term d18O signals
  • Amplitude is much smaller than Greenland
  • Some hint that signal are opposite
  • Temperature sea-saw could be related to NADW

14
Ocean Conveyer Belt Circulation
  • Northward flowing currents in Southern Ocean
    removes heat
  • Adds heat to N. Atlantic
  • Suggests that even distant millennial-scale
    oscillation
  • Can be driven by N. Atlantic
  • As a response to changes in NADW formation
  • Response to this forcing can be different in
    different environments
  • Can be even opposite

15
Millennial-Scale Greenhouse Gas
  • Greenland CH4 show millennial-scale oscillations
  • However concentrations changes lag temperature
    changes
  • CH4 not driver
  • CO2 not trustworthy because of CaCO3 dissolution
    in Greenland
  • No detailed records from Antarctica
  • Expect changes in CO2 if NADW is a driver

16
Millennial-Scale Oscillation lt8K Years Old
  • Although lower in amplitude, oscillation exist
  • Fluctuations weak and show variations of 2,600
    year cycle
  • Changes in sea salt have 2,600 year cycle
  • Greenland ice cores

17
N. Atlantic Sediments
  • Slight increases in very small sand sized grains
  • Depositional intervals of 1,500-2,000 years
  • Probably transported by large icebergs
  • That are common in N. Atlantic today

18
Mountain Glaciers
  • Oscillation apparent superimposed on gradual
    cooling
  • Irregular spacing over last 8,000 years
  • Poorly dated
  • Oscillations present
  • Cyclic nature of the oscillation
  • Not well known (1,500 versus 2,500 years)

19
Causes of Oscillations
  • Hypotheses must explain key questions
  • What initiates the oscillations?
  • How are they transmitted to other parts of the
    climate system where they have been documented?
  • Why are they stronger during glaciations than
    during interglaciations?
  • Hypotheses include
  • Natural oscillations in the internal behavior of
    N. hemisphere ice sheets
  • The result of internal interactions among several
    parts of the climate system
  • A response to solar variations external to the
    climate system

20
Physics of Change Poorly Understood
  • Explanation must address
  • States among which the climate system has jumped
  • Mechanism by which the climate system can be
    triggered to jump from one climate state to
    another
  • Invoke a telecommunication system by which the
    message can be transmitted globally
  • Must have a flywheel capable of holding the
    system in a given state for centuries

21
Processes Within Ice Sheets
  • Ice sheets obvious choice since strong glacial
    signal
  • Margins of ice sheets can change rapidly
  • Perhaps movement of marine ice sheets from one
    pinning point to another
  • Ice sheets break of forming flotilla of icebergs
  • Hard to argue that ice sheets can recover from
    such losses in just 1,500 years

22
Interactions Within Climate System
  • Such interactions require several components of
    the climate system
  • Function as nearly equal partners
  • Continuously interact
  • Must have similar response times and the right
    response time
  • Must not take over and drive the entire climate
    system
  • A natural for this response in NADW

23
Current Thinking Two Camps
  • Multiple state of thermohaline circulation
  • Trigger catastrophic input of fresh water to N.
    Atlantic
  • Flywheel sluggish dynamics of internal ocean
  • Missing change of interactions capable of
    producing immediate large and widespread
    atmospheric impacts

24
Current Thinking Two Camps
  • Changes in dynamics of the tropical
    atmosphere-ocean system
  • Since tropical convective systems constitute the
    dominant element in Earths climate system
  • Trigger most like resides in the region that
    house the El Nino-La Nina cycle
  • Telecommunication not a problem!
  • No evidence for multiple states of of tropical
    atmosphere-ocean system
  • Unless it affects deep ocean, no flywheel capable
    of locking the atmosphere into one of its
    alternate states

25
Another Broecker Hypothesis
  • Salt oscillator hypothesis
  • NADW removes heat and salt from N. Atlantic
  • Heat melts ice and delivers fresh water to N.
    Atlantic reducing salinity
  • Gulf Stream and N. Atlantic Drift transport heat
    and salt to subpolar Atlantic
  • Replenish salt and heat to N. Atlantic

26
Salt Oscillator Hypothesis
  • During times of NADW formation
  • Ice melting dilutes salinity of N. Atlantic
  • Eventually slowing or stopping NADW formation
  • When NADW does not form
  • Less salt removed and little heat transported
    north
  • Ice sheets stop melting
  • N. Atlantic gets salty and NADW starts to form
    again

27
Hypothesis Testable and Global
  • Oscillation in NADW should alter atmospheric CO2
  • Short-term records not yet available
  • Change in N. Atlantic SST would affect
    atmospheric temperatures possible
    telecommunication
  • Atmospheric circulation patterns
  • Could alter jet stream and affect other regions
    (e.g., Santa Barbara Basin)
  • NADW eventually interacts with ACC
  • Potential to influence Southern Ocean SST
  • Producing a opposite-phased seesaw (seasaw?)
  • Unclear if oscillations lt4K years linked with NADW

28
Solar Variability
  • Variations in the strength of Sun
  • Comparison between 10Be in ice cores and 14C in
    tree rings
  • Link production rates to sun strength
  • Variability dont show millennial-scale
    oscillations

29
Solar Variability Problems
  • Age of tree rings exact and 10Be gives indication
    of production
  • Residuals affected also by carbon cycle
  • Oscillations at 420 and perhaps 2,100 years
  • No production cycle at 1,500 years
  • Unlikely that strength of Sun
  • Responsible for variability noted
  • Why was it greater during glaciations?

30
Where Do We Stand?
  • Evidence supports reorganization of thermohaline
    circulation
  • Accompany Younger Dryas and Heinrich Events
  • Although reorganization may be a consequence of
    climate change initiated elsewhere
  • Probably NADW is primary trigger
  • Ocean changes likely affected tropical atmosphere
    dynamics
  • Drove global atmospheric changes
  • Missing mechanism for transmitting the signal
    from deep ocean to tropical atmosphere
  • Time scales of only a few decades

31
Status of Millennial-Scale Oscillation
  • Proof of underlying mechanism must come from
    climate records
  • Key feature to determine if far-field climate
    changes predate changes attributable to ocean
    reorganization
  • Requires precise dating of events globally
  • May be doomed by abrupt nature of events
  • Current search for precursor events
  • What is happening just prior to Heinrich event?
    Cooling? Warming?

32
Future Oscillations
  • Changes rapid enough to affect human populations
  • Will millennial-scale oscillation warm or cool
    climate in the future?
  • Ignoring anthropogenic greenhouse gases
  • Slow natural cooling of N. hemisphere
  • Likely interrupted by rapid millennial-scale
    cooling events
  • Nature of the oscillations during the last 8K
    years
  • Makes future changes difficult to predict
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