Earth System - II (ECS202) : DR Neena Joseph Mani Earth & Climate Science
Earth System - II (ECS202) : DR Neena Joseph Mani Earth & Climate Science
(ECS202)
Lecture 6
Ablation of ice accelerates rapidly when X axis: Annual (full year) mean
temperatures warm. Melting begins at mean temperature
annual temperatures above –10°C, equivalent
to summer temperatures above 0°C
Glacial – Climate Feedbacks
On the other hand, obliquity and precession cycles, can bring about 10-
12% change in seasonal insolation.
When Earth's eccentricity is nearly zero, there is no difference between the
perihelion distance and the aphelion distance from the Sun, so it does not matter
when summer or winter occurs.
The combined effects of eccentricity and precession cause the distance from the Earth to
the Sun to vary by season, primarily at a cycle of 23,000 years, with significant amplitude
modulations at 100,000 year periodicity.
The Glacial – Interglacial cycles seem to correspond to the 100 kyr
eccentricity solar forcing. Why not the Precession and Obliquity
forcing?
The combination of the various orbital forcings causes Earth's climate
system to oscillate between warmer and cooler states. High eccentricity
increases the amplitude of the variations on precession cycles and thus is
more likely to be associated with transitions from interglacial to glacial
states
At present we are at low eccentricity, and the eccentricity will be decreasing to
a minimum near zero in about 30,000 years from now. With eccentricity so low,
the unusually cold winters needed to initiate Northern Hemisphere ice-sheet
growth will not occur. Thus, climatologists predict that the present interglacial
will be long-lived (at least 1.5-2.5 precession cycles).
The first continuous and detailed δ 18 O
record of the entire 2.75 Myr of northern
hemisphere glacial history was compiled in
the late 1980s by isotopic analysis of benthic
foraminifera from the North Atlantic Ocean
The rate of sea floor spreading has slowed down over the past 100 Myr, which has
reduced the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere and hence cooled the planet.
Superimposed on this tectonic scale climate change are orbital scale variability
which causes advance and retreat of ice sheets –glacial-interglacial cycles of
periodicity of tens to hundreds of thousands of years.
There are even shorter timescale climatic signals that lasted a few thousand years
overriding the orbital scale variability – related to variability of CO2 concentrations
and internal variability of the ocean atmosphere system.