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Palaeoclimates. Presented by : Cherie Forbes (MSc, Plant Conservation Unit, Botany Department, UCT) Supervisor: Lindsey Gillson , Co-supervisor: Timm Hoffman. Overview:. Introduction 1.1. What and why Palaeoclimates? 1.2. Palaeohistorical (and geological) perspective
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Palaeoclimates Presented by: Cherie Forbes (MSc, Plant Conservation Unit, Botany Department, UCT) Supervisor: Lindsey Gillson, Co-supervisor: Timm Hoffman
Overview: • Introduction 1.1. What and why Palaeoclimates? 1.2. Palaeohistorical (and geological) perspective • How we measure palaeoclimates 2.1. Proxies: oxygen isotopes (δ18O) 2.2. Sources: sediment and ice cores • Key concepts of climate variation 3.1. ‘Snowball’ earth –greenhouse and icehouse 3.2. Orbital forcing (Milankovitch cycles) – glacials and interglacials • Case study: Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM, 56 mya)
1.1. What and why Palaeoclimate? • What? • Climate change in the past [‘palaeo’ = ‘old/ancient’] • another dimension to HP story • Why? • Earth hasn’t always been habitable - experienced tremendous climate change over time • Provide valuable insights into climate system, its variability, and its vulnerability • Lessonslearned from past (natural drivers) – current conservation issues (e.g. Anthropogenic climate change)
2. How we measure palaeoclimates Billions of years ago • Sources: • Dating methods (radiometric, magnetic etc) Sedimentary Rocks - 4.5 Gya Millions of years ago Sediment Cores - 200 Mya Sapropels – 22 Mya Ice cores – 800 Kya (EPICA) Thousands of years ago Speleothems – 500 Kya Tree rings – 11 Kya Coral dating - 1 Kya
2. How we measure palaeoclimates • Source + dating method + proxy data • But what is a proxy? • indirect way of measuring change in something • E.g. thermometer! • Can’t directly measure past temperature/weather/currents/weathering/biology • So we develop proxies – an indicator of processes • Common proxies used in Palaeo records: • Mg/Ca, Alkenones, TEX86, Isotopes (same atomic number, different mass e.g. δ18O, δ13C)
2.1. Proxy data: δ18O • Sea water contains a ratio of oxygen isotopes • Foraminifera (little sea creatures) living at the ocean's surface make shells from CaCO3 • Isotopic composition of the shells is a function of temperature (Colder = enriched (more 18O); Warmer = depleted (less 18O)) • interpreted in terms of changing temperature over time
2.2. Sources: Ocean sedimentary cores • Continuous ocean records going back 65 Ma • Coarse-scale sampling resolution (one sample/ 3 kyr) • Excellent archive of long-term climate change (esp. detection of ice-ages )
2.2. Sources: ice-cores • Continuous ice-core records going back 800,000 years • Fine-scale sampling resolution (annual layers in some cores) • Excellent archive of fine-scale fluctuations in climate change (esp. detection of atmospheric concentrations of CO2 and changing δ18O)
3. Key concepts: 3.1. Snowball earth (Greenhouse & Icehouse) • 'snowball' Earth (Hoffman and Schrag, 2002) • Evidenceof widespread glaciation (Kirschvink et al., 2000; Hoffman and Schrag, 2002) - Palaeomagnetic studies of equatorial carbonate deposits, prolonged drop in biological activity and formation of iron-rich rocks (formed in absence of oxygen)
3.1. Greenhouse & Icehouse • Greenhouse conditions - Earth is ice free • Icehouse conditions - polar and alpine ice-sheets Climatic megacycles during the Phanerozoic (from Huggett, 1997; Willis & McElwain, 2002)
3.1: Snowball earth (Greenhouse & Icehouse) • Transition from “Greenhouse” to “Ice House” driven by plate tectonic processes Temperature trends in the Tertiary (from Willis & McElwain, 2002)
3. Key concepts: 3.2. Orbital forcing – glacials and interglacials • Milutin Milankovitch (Serbian astrophysicist and geophysicist, born 1879–died 1958) • Improved on methods of calculating Earth’s orbital cycles and relating them to Earth’s climatic variations • affects the strength and distribution of sunlight we receive • cycles within icehouse • glacials (ice-sheets expand)and interglacials (and contract)
Milankovitch Cycles 1: Eccentricity (100,000 yrs) • The orbit of the earth varies from almost circular to much more “stretched” = elliptical • This property is known as Eccentricity
Milankovitch Cycles 2: Obliquity – Axial Tilt (41,000 yrs) • The seasons are caused by the tilt of the Earth’s axis • With no tilt in the Earth’s axis, there would be no seasons • The greater the angle of the tilt, the greater the difference between the seasons: • Variation in the Earth’s axial tilt (obliquity) varies from 22.1º to 24.5º with a periodicity of ~41KY.
Milankovitch Cycles 3: Precession (21,000 yrs) • While the earth is spinning on its axis, it also “wobbles” like a spinning top. • The cycle takes about 16 000 years. • Note that this is separate from “tilt” (obliquity) – in the two diagrams opposite, the angle of tilt is the same, but the top is facing in a different directions because of “wobble”
Milankovitch Cycles • Eccentricity (100,000 yrs) • Obliquity (41,000 yrs) • Precession (21,000 yrs) Solar forcing
3.2. Glacials and interglacials Time before 2005 (ka)
Where are we now?...Icehouse, interglacial (Holocene) • Recent interglacial (Holocene, approximately 10,000 years BP) has been very stable – development of human civilisations
4. Case study: Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM, 56 million ya) • Brief abrupt warm climatic event • frozen methane on the ocean floor melted and created a massive greenhouse gas spike • PETM = An analogy for current anthropogenic climate change??? (Zachos et al., 2001) • PETM • no humans!!! • longer time period (30 000 yr)
Concluding remarks • Reconstruct past climates using a combination of different types of proxy records • Past climate change = highly variable (Ma–present) • Palaeoclimate perspective – temporal BONUS in Earth system science & why Earth habitable!!! • Challenge: Anthropogenic climate change! • PETM possibly not best analogy • SA perspective?? – West Coast Fossil Park?! • Kenya perspective?? – Lake Turkana
References: • Bartoli, G. et al. Final closure of Panama and the onset of northern hemisphere glaciation. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 237, 3344 (2005). • Dwyer, G.S., and M.A. Chandler, 2009: Mid-Pliocene sea level and continental ice volume based on coupled benthic Mg/Ca palaeotemperatures and oxygen isotopes. Phil. Trans. Royal Soc. A, 367, 157-168, doi:10.1098/rsta.2008.0222 • Robinson, M., H.J. Dowsett, and M.A. Chandler, 2008: Pliocene role in assessing future climate impacts. Eos Trans. Amer. Geophys. U., 89, 501-502 • Zachos J, Pagani M, Sloan L, Thomas E, Billups K. Trends, rhythms, and aberrations in global climate 65 Ma to present. Science 2001; 292: 686-693. • Temperature trends in the Tertiary (from Willis & McElwain, 2002)
Acknowledgments THANK YOU • Applied Centre for Climate and Earth System Science (ACCESS) • Supervisors: A/Prof Lindsey Gillson and Prof Timm Hoffman • Carl Palmer (HPW co-ordinator) and Neville Sweijd (ACCESS Operations Manager)
Q1: The following are not proxies used in palaeo- research • Mg/Ca, Alkenones, TEX86, Isotopes • Mg/Ca, Alkenones, tree rings, Isotopes, sediment cores • δ18O, Mg/Ca, Alkenones, TEX86, fossil pollen, fossil charcoal • Methane, nitrogen dioxide and δ18O
Q2: Which are false regarding Snowball earth? • Snowball earth is a key concept which describes the climate over a geological timescale • Snowball earth occurred over millions of years and depicted icehouse and greenhouse periods • We are in an ice-house at the moment • During greenhouse conditions the Earth has some ice-sheets in the polar and mountainous (so the alpine) regions
Q3: Which of the following is false about Milankovitch cycles? • The seasons are caused by the tilt of the Earth’s axis…this property is known as Eccentricity • Our planet moves in specific ways which affects the strength and distribution of sunlight we receive • The main driver for climate change during the orbital timescale was changes of the earth’s orbit around the sun • Milankovitch cyclesare seen within icehouse as glacials and interglacials
Proxy data: δ18O • Sea water contains a ratio of oxygen isotopes. • Foraminifera (little sea creatures) living at the ocean's surface make shells from CaCO3 • Isotopic composition of the shells is a function of temperature Colder = enriched (more 18O); Warmer = depleted (less 18O) • Shells constantly accumulating on the oceans floor in sedimentary layers • These layers provide an isotopic record that can be interpreted in terms of changing temperature over time • E.g. Layers of isotopically heavy oxygen foraminifera in marine cores indicate glacial periods
Consequences of opening the Drake’s passage • Cold circumpolar ocean current around Antarctica • Warm equatorial currents prevented from reaching s. polar regions • Thermal isolation of Antarctica • Initiation of Antarctic Ice Sheet