Ice-Age Cycles 2 Lisiecki and Raymo (2005)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
What drives the ice age cycles?
Advertisements

Penultimate deglacial sea level timing from U/Th dating of Tahitian corals Alex L. Thomas, Gideon M. Henderson, Pierre Deschamps, Yusuke Yokoyama, Andrew.
Have out B.4/B.7 worksheet Objective: Describe the relationship between global dimming and global warming. Catalyst: Why does global dimming occur only.
The importance of Pliocene time slices for environmental synthesis and climate modelling Alan M. Haywood Co-authors: Caroline Prescott, Aisling Dolan,
1 Last Glacial Maximum (~20K yrs ago) and afterwards What was climate like during LGM? What happened to end LGM? How has climate varied since LGM? What.
Drift of solar constants for the Earth (1), Venus (2) and Marc (3) due to increasing of Sun’s luminosity. Within an interval formed by carves 4 and 5 the.
Lecture 8: Orbital Variation and Insolation Change (Chapter 7)
Lecture 34: Orbital (Milankovitch) Theory of the Ice Ages
Abrupt Climate Change Evidence of climate changes that are too abrupt to be explained orbitally.
Lecture 34: Orbital (Milankovitch) Theory of the Ice Ages
On the Origin of Antarctic Warming Events: A Modeling Study of Causes and Effects Oliver Timm, Laurie Menviel, Axel Timmermann International Pacific Research.
Welcome to... Presented by Rod Benson Earth Science Teacher Helena High School.
Climate models in (palaeo-) climatic research How can we use climate models as tools for hypothesis testing in (palaeo-) climatic research and how can.
“Being Milutin Milankovitch” Or “From Millennia to Hours: The Decreasing Scales of the Orbital Theory of Multin Milankovitch” Adapted from Dr. Randy Cerveny.
Natural and Human Influences on Climate Change
Outline Review of Ocean Stratification and Circulation Recent historical Climate Change External Climate Forcings Natural Climate Variability Paleoclimatology.
Abrupt Climate Change Paleoceanography Presentation 6/15/2015 By Beth Hart ?
Transient Paleoclimate Simulations with LOVECLIM Oliver Elison Timm, International Pacific Research Center, University of Hawai`i at Mānoa Laurie Menviel,
Climate through Earth history
Lecture 13 Orbital-Scale Interactions, Feedbacks and Unresolved Problems The Cause of Glacial Cycles? (Chapter 11)
Earth’s Climate Past and Future Prof. Z. Liu Dept. Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences.
Part IV: Historical Climate Changes Lecture 18: The Little Ice Age (Chapter 15)
Lecture 10: Orbital Control of Ice Sheets
O. Elison Timm 1 A. Timmermann 1,4 T. Friedrich 1 A. Abe-Ouchi 2,3 J. Knies 5 Forced response of a Northern Hemisphere ice-sheet model to climate changes.
Glacial-Interglacial Variability Records of the Pleistocene Ice Ages
Mechanisms of Past Climate Change (16:107:553) Fall 2007 Ice Ages and Changes in Earth’s Orbit.
Rising Temperatures. Various Temperature Reconstructions from
Natural Fluctuations in Climate Natural Climate Summary Rapid Change Issues Paleoclimate ©2004, Perry Samson, University of Michigan.
Paleoclimatology Why is it important? Angela Colbert Climate Modeling Group October 24, 2011.
Creating an Orbitally Tuned Chronology. Overview.
Supplementary information to chapter 5.8: Modelling the end of an interglacial (MIS 1, 5, 7, 9, 11) Claudia Kubatzki*, Martin Claussen**, Reinhard Calov,
CCSM PaleoClimate Working Group Transient Mid-Holocene Simulation Caspar Ammann Bette Otto-Bliesner Esther Brady Carrie Morrill Fortunat Joos Raimond Mueschler.
Characterizing and understanding the Quaternary Glacial/Interglacial cycles Earth’s Climate and Environment: Past, Present, and Future GEOL 3100.
Alley’s ‘Wally Was Right: Predictive Ability of the North Atlantic “Conveyor Belt” Hypothesis for Abrupt Climate Change’ Jake Leech 29 Aug 08.
A bipolar perspective on past climate change (and expectations for information from the Third Pole) Valérie Masson-Delmotte Laboratoire des Sciences du.
Brody Fuchs Zitely Tzompa. Homo habilis 1 st mammals Rockies & Alps.
Chapter 5 Brief history of climate: causes and mechanisms Climate system dynamics and modelling Hugues Goosse.
Lecture 27: Climate Change in the Last Years Ch. 13.
Module 4 Changes in Climate. Global Warming? Climate change –The pattern(s) of variation in climate (temperature, precipitation) over various periods.
Carbon and Climate System Coupling on Timescales from the Precambrian to the Anthropocene Scott C. Doney1 and David S. Schimel2.
Milankovitch Cycles and the Big Chill CGF3MI Sunday, June 5, 2016.
Chapter 10 — Insolation control of ice sheets Ruitang Soong.
Lecture 29: Millennial Changes in Other Regions
Global Climate Change A long term perspective. Global Warming CO 2 levels in the atmosphere rising Average global temperature is rising Polar ice caps.
A GCM Reconstruction of the Last Glacial Inception Megan Essig 1, Francis Otieno 2, Robert Oglesby 1, David Bromwich 2 1 Department of Geosciences, University.
Willie Soon. Introduction 1. The relationship between atmospheric CO2 and CH4 concentrations, temperature, and ice-sheet volume 2. Atmospheric CO2 radiative.
Inferred δ 13 C and δ 18 O distributions in the modern and Last Glacial Maximum deep Atlantic Holly Dail ECCO Meeting November 1,
Simulating the Late Ordovician with the CCSM3 C.A. Shields, J.T. Kiehl, C.R.Scotese* NCAR/CGD/CCR/Paleo *PALEOMAP Project Acknowledgements: Steve Yeager.
Factor Influencing Climate Change Tectonics Ocean Circulation Patterns and the Thermohaline Cycle Orbital Forcing Mechanisms Atmospheric Variations.
Milankovitch Cycles (Images from Unversity of Montana geology department website)
The Younger Dryas and Rapid Climate Change Bruno Tremblay McGill University
Climate Model Tests of the Early Anthropogenic Hypothesis Steve Vavrus Center for Climatic Research University of Wisconsin Bill Ruddiman (U. Virginia),
What have we covered so far – the Basic Questions 1. Climate has not always been similar to the present; in fact has rarely been like the present Holocene.
An Orbital Theory For Glacial Periods
Orbital Control of Climate The last 600,000 years.
In defense of Milankovitch Gerard Roe, 2008 Presented by Diane deWilde.
Aim: study the first order local forcing mechanisms Focusing on 50°-90°S (regional features will average out)
Orbital Hypothesis of Climate Change & Pleistocene Ice Ages.
CSDMS Annual Meeting 2016: Capturing Climate Change May 2016 Bette Otto-Bliesner Climate Dynamics of Tropical Africa: Capturing Paleoclimate.
Evidence of Climate Change. CO 2 levels historically rose and fell below 300 ppm. Increase since Industrial Revolution: now reached 400 ppm.
A BOUT MY THESIS 2010/03/02 Pei-Yu Chueh. M OTIVATION An Inconvenient Truth: The temperature was determined by the concentrations of carbon dioxide. (Al.
Our water planet and our water hemisphere
Milankovitch cycles/ Chaotic obliquity variations
Discussion of Abrupt Climate Change
Orbital Control of Monsoon Circulation in an accelerated
Warm saline deep water production in
High Latitude Insolation and Climate Response
Transient simulations of the last 30,000 years, within the GENIE earth-system framework D.J. Lunt (1) M.Williamson (2) A. Price (3) P.J. Valdes (1)
“Being Milutin Milankovitch”
Oscillations – Resonance Glacial Cycle
Presentation transcript:

Ice-Age Cycles 2 Lisiecki and Raymo (2005)

Orbital Control 3 AuthorsYear Orbital control of LGM Timing of LGM Joseph Adhémar 1842longer winter (duration)~10 ka James Croll1860s weaker insolation in winter (Intensity) ~ 10ka Milutin Milankovic 1930s weaker insolation in summer (Intensity) ~22 ka Hays, Imbrie, Shackleton 1976 Confirmed Milankovic theory with 450 kyr oxygen isotope records from the sediments of the Southern Ocean

Problem of SH-lead 4 “Fly in the ointment”

Recent hypotheses for the SH-control of ice age cycles 5

2008

Data-model comparison: testing mechanisms of the last deglaciation 9 IPCC-type coupled climate model High-res proxy data Loutre, M. F. (2003)

Model: CCSM3 (T31_gx3v5) + dynamic vegetation ATM 3.75(lon) x 3.75(lat) x 26(level) OCN ~3 (lon/lat) x 25 (level) Peak performance: 120 model years per day 21,000 years in 6 months Data storage: over 300 TB INCITE Supercomputing Support 10

TraCE simulations Transient boundary conditions Orbital forcing GHGs Ice sheets Meltwater forcing (AMOC) 11

Five simulations Simulation ALL (ORBIT+GHG+Ice sheets+AMOC) Simulation ORB (ORBIT) Simulation GHG (GHG) Simulation ICE (Ice sheets) Simulation MOC (AMOC) 12

13 Ice sheet changes (once per 500 years) He 2011

14

15

Transient simulation of the last deglaciation Simulation ALL 16

17

18

19

20

21

TraCE simulation of the SH deglaciation

Bipolar seesaw early deglacial warming in the SH (Simulation ALL vs. single forcing simulations) 24

bipolar seesaw (19-17 ka) 25

Deglacial CO 2 rise synchronous deglacial warming and eventually reach and sustain complete deglaciation (Simulation ALL vs. single forcing simulations) 26

CO 2 -induced global warming (17-15 ka) 27

Mechanism of the terminations What’s causing the deglacial CO 2 rise? 28

Heinrich events & deglacial CO 2 rise 29

Deglacial CO 2 rise due to Southern Ocean processes

NH meltwater Early warming of the Southern Ocean deglacial CO2 rise 31

Large NH Ice sheets at LGM NH meltwater Early warming of the Southern Ocean deglacial CO 2 rise

2010