Ocean Circulation Implicated in Past Abrupt Climate Changes
Last edited Thu Jun 30, 2016, 05:52 PM - Edit history (1)
http://www.ldeo.columbia.edu/news-events/ocean-circulation-implicated-past-abrupt-climate-changes[font face=Serif][font size=5]Ocean Circulation Implicated in Past Abrupt Climate Changes[/font]
June 30, 2016
[font size=3]There was a period during the last ice age when temperatures in the Northern Hemisphere went on a rollercoaster ride, plummeting and then rising again every 1,500 years or so. Those abrupt climate changes wreaked havoc on ecosystems, but their cause has been something of a mystery. New evidence published this week in the leading journal Science shows for the first time that the oceans overturning circulation slowed during every one of those temperature plunges at times almost stopping.
"People have long supposed this link between overturning circulation and these abrupt climate events. This evidence implicates the ocean," said L. Gene Henry, the lead author of the study and a graduate student at Columbia Universitys Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory.
The impact of changes in the ocean overturning circulation on climate has become a hot topic today as global temperatures rise and melting sea ice and glaciers add freshwater to the North Atlantic. A
2015 study suggested that cooling in the North Atlantic may be due to a reduction in the overturning circulation, while a
2016 study suggested there had not been enough freshwater to have an effect.
The
new study explores what happened to ocean circulation when the Earth went through a series of abrupt climate changes in the past, during a time when ice covered part of North America and temperatures were colder than today. It looks at the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation, which distributes heat as it moves warmer surface water from the tropics toward Greenland and the high northern latitudes and carries colder, deeper water from the North Atlantic southward.
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