Title: Chapter 10
1 Chapter 10 Insolation control of ice
sheets
2Outline
- What controls the size of ice sheet?
- Modeling the behavior of ice sheets
- North hemisphere ice sheet history
3What controls the sizeof ice sheet?
- Elevation Latitude
- Temperate
- Insolation
- Orbit of Solar-Earth
Figure 10-1
4Orbital-scale control of ice sheetThe
Milankovitch theory
- Key point Summer insolation
control of ice sheets - Previous study
- J.A. Adhemar (1842)
- James Croll (1864, 1875)
- Milutin Milankovitch (1915 1940)
combined precession, eccentricity, and tilt.
Chose summer in the northern high latitudes as
the important season predicted warm periods at
125, 105, and 82 ka.
5Diagram depicting variation in precession. Image
by Robert Simmon, NASA GSFC. Taken from
http//earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Library/Giants/Mi
lankovitch/milankovitch.html.
6Figure 10-2
Figure 10-3
7Modeling the behavior of ice sheets
- weak insolation in summer
- Ice growth, ice bedrock depression
- strong insolation in summer
- Ice melting, ice slipping calving, bedrock
swelling - Two feedback mechanism
8Insolation Control of ice sheet size
- Climate point
- Equilibrium line
Figure 10-5
9Figure 10-7
Figure 10-6
10Ice sheet lags behind summer insolation forcing
- Ice volume response to lnsolation
where l is ice volume
d(I)/d(t) is the rate of change of ice volume per unit of time (t)
T is the response time of the ice sheet
S is the curve of changing summer insolation
Figure 10-8
11Figure 10-9
12Delayed bedrock response beneath ice sheet
- Elastic response
- Viscous response
Tack from Richard E. Goodman, Introduction to
Rock Mechanics, 2/e, 1989,Wiley
Figure 10-10
13Figure 10-11 Bedrock feedback to ice growth and
melting Insolation control of ice sheet size the
initial lag of ice volume behind insolation the
subsequent lag of bedrock depression and rebound
behind ice loading and unloading
14Full cycle of ice growth and decay
Figure 10-12
15Ice slipping and calving
- Basal slipping (terrain, stress)
- Calving
- Ice sheet models can be coupled to 3D GCM models.
16North hemisphereice sheet history
17Conceptual Model Evolution of ice sheet cycles
- Changes in summer insolation (shorter-term
change) - Gradual global cooling (longer-term change)
- Note
- cycle of tilt is 41,000 year
- cycle of precession is 23,000 year
- cycle of eccentricity is 100,000 and 413,000 year
Figure 10-13
18Figure 10-14
19Evidence from d18OHow ice sheets actually
evolved
- Ocean sediments contain two key indicator of past
glaciations - Ice-rafted debris
- d18O
N. Shackleton
Figure 10-15
20Figure 10-16
Figure 10-17
21Confirming ice volume changeCoral reefs and sea
level
- d18O (ice volume)
- Radiocarbon (234U?230Th)
- Ice-rafted debris
- Coral reefs (sea level)
22Box 10-3
23Using astronomical and d18O signals as a
chronometer
Figure 10-21