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ICE WORLD
North American ice sheet decay decreased climate variability in Southern Hemisphere
by Staff Writers
Boulder CO (SPX) Feb 06, 2018

"When there is a large ice sheet over North America, the circulation of the atmosphere becomes very different than today," said Jones. The new results corroborate another published research study suggesting that ice sheet changes during the same time period shifted the climate in the tropical Pacific enough to transform the terrestrial ecosystems of present-day Indonesia from a grassland savannah to a rainforest, which they remain today.

New research led by the University of Colorado Boulder shows that the changing topography of ice sheets in the Northern Hemisphere during the last Ice Age forced changes in the climate of Antarctica, a previously undocumented inter-polar climate change mechanism.

The new study - published in the journal Nature and co-authored by researchers at the University of Bristol, University of Washington and UC Berkeley - suggests that substantial reduction of the Laurentide Ice Sheet that covered much of present-day North America approximately 16,000 years ago resulted in significant climate variations in the tropical Pacific and in West Antarctica.

"The results demonstrate how seemingly localized effects in one part of the world may have a large impact on climate elsewhere on Earth," said Tyler Jones, a research associate in CU Boulder's Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research (INSTAAR) and the lead author of the new study.

Jones and his colleagues studied an ice core collected from the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) in order to document historical climate. The WAIS ice core is the first climate record to preserve year-to-year climate variability continuously as far back as 30,000 years ago.

"This ice core is really important because it contains long-term climate information that relates to the timescales that humans experience and remember," said Jones.

At INSTAAR's Stable Isotope Lab, the researchers slowly melted and then vaporized the ice cores for analysis using laser absorption spectroscopy, a new methodology that reveals the isotopic composition of the water. This method has improved the researchers' ability to measure climate change through ice cores, both by increasing measurement resolution and saving time.

When researchers examined the amplitude of year-to-year climate signals preserved in the WAIS core, they noticed a large, abrupt decline in the signal strength approximately 16,000 years ago. They subsequently determined that the anomaly was largely caused by the lowering of the Laurentide Ice Sheet.

"When there is a large ice sheet over North America, the circulation of the atmosphere becomes very different than today," said Jones. The new results corroborate another published research study suggesting that ice sheet changes during the same time period shifted the climate in the tropical Pacific enough to transform the terrestrial ecosystems of present-day Indonesia from a grassland savannah to a rainforest, which they remain today.

Overall, the study highlights that changes in the Earth's climate system can be linked across vast distances.

"No one has really investigated this kind of signal before. It potentially opens up new and exciting ways to think about climate data," said Jones.

Research paper


Related Links
University of Colorado at Boulder
Beyond the Ice Age


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ICE WORLD
Heat loss from the Earth triggers ice sheet slide towards the sea
Aarhus, Denmark (SPX) Jan 29, 2018
Greenland's ice sheet is becoming smaller and smaller. The melting takes place with increased strength and at a speed that no models have previously predicted. In the esteemed journal Scientific Reports, researchers from the Arctic Research Centre, Aarhus University, and the Greenland Institute of Natural Resources present results that, for the first time, show that the deep bottom water of the north-eastern Greenland fjords is being warmed up by heat gradually lost from the Earth's interior. And ... read more

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