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Environment Institute and Department of Geosciences, The
Pennsylvania State University, Deike Building, University Park, PA
16802
Ice-core records show that climate changes in the past
have been large, rapid, and synchronous over broad areas extending into
low latitudes, with less variability over historical times. These
ice-core records come from high mountain glaciers and the polar
regions, including small ice caps and the large ice sheets of Greenland
and Antarctica.
As the world slid into and
out of the last ice age, the general cooling and warming trends were
punctuated by abrupt changes. Climate shifts up to half as large as the
entire difference between ice age and modern conditions occurred over
hemispheric or broader regions in mere years to decades. Such abrupt
changes have been absent during the few key millennia when agriculture
and industry have arisen. The speed, size, and extent of these abrupt
changes required a reappraisal of climate stability. Records of these changes are especially clear in high-resolution ice cores. Ice cores
can preserve histories of local climate (snowfall, temperature), regional (wind-blown dust, sea salt, etc.), and broader (trace gases in
the air) conditions, on a common time scale, demonstrating synchrony of
climate changes over broad regions.
Dating and Accumulation.
On some glaciers and ice sheets, sufficient snow falls each year to
form recognizable annual layers, marked by seasonal variations in
physical, chemical, electrical, and isotopic properties. These can be
counted to determine ages (e.g., refs. 1 and 2). Accuracy can be
assessed by comparison to the chemically identified fallout of
historically dated volcanoes and in other ways (3); errors can be less
than 1% of estimated ages. Ice flow may disrupt layers quite close to
the bed (4, 5), and ice flow progressively thins layers with increasing
burial so that diffusion or sampling limitations eventually obscure
annual layers.
Perspectives
Ice-core evidence of abrupt climate changes
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Abstract
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Ice-Core Interpretation
Ice-Core Results
Insights
References
![]()
Introduction
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Ice-Core Interpretation
Ice-Core Results
Insights
References
![]()
Ice-Core Interpretation
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Ice-Core Interpretation
Ice-Core Results
Insights
References
Paleothermometry. Ice cores are local paleothermometers, telling past temperature where they are (or where the snow fell, if glacier flow has caused ice in a core to have come from a significant distance). The classic paleothermometer is the stable-isotopic composition of water in the ice core (10). Natural waters typically contain a fraction of a percent of isotopically heavy molecules (in which the hydrogen or oxygen contains one or two "extra" neutrons). The vapor pressure of this heavy water is less than for "normal" light water. As an air mass is cooled and precipitates, it preferentially loses heavy water and must increasingly precipitate light water. At very low temperatures, heavy water has been greatly depleted and precipitation is isotopically light. Empirically and theoretically, isotopic composition of precipitation and site temperature are strongly correlated in time and space (10, 11); colder places and colder times have isotopically lighter precipitation.
Atmospheric and glaciologic factors other than temperature can affect the isotopic paleothermometer, but several other paleothermometers allow calibration and validation. The physical temperature of the ice is important. Just as it takes a while to warm the center of cold food placed in a hot oven, deeper regions of the large ice sheets have not completed warming from the low temperatures of the previous global ice age, revealing how cold the ice age was. Joint interpretation of the ice-isotopic and ice-temperature paleothermometers gives greater confidence in the results (12, 13). Additional paleothermometers are provided at times of rapid climate change. An abrupt air-temperature change causes a temperature difference between the snow surface and the bubble-trapping depth, and this temperature difference then relaxes over a century or so as the deeper layers adjust to the new surface temperature. Temperature gradients cause gas-isotope fractionation by the process of thermal diffusion, with heavier isotopes migrating toward colder regions. Diffusion of gases through pore spaces in firn is faster than diffusion of heat, so the isotope signal reaches the bubble-trapping depth before the heat does, and the isotope anomaly is recorded as the air is trapped in the bubbles (8). The degree of enrichment reveals how big the temperature difference was, and thus the magnitude of any abrupt climate change. In addition, the number of annual layers between the record in the ice and in the bubbles of an abrupt climate change is a known function of temperature and snow accumulation; using snow-accumulation data, one can learn the absolute temperature just before the abrupt climate change (8). These paleothermometers agree closely on the size, speed, and timing of surface-temperature changes in central Greenland. Results from other regions rest on fewer paleothermometers and are somewhat less secure, especially in meteorologically complex areas (10, 14).Aerosols. Anything in the atmosphere eventually can end up in an ice core. Some materials are reversibly deposited (15), but most remain in the ice unchanged. The details of the air-snow transfer process are very complex but are being elucidated (16). Careful statistical and physical analyses are needed to make sense of small, short-lived changes, but large changes in concentrations of most materials in ice reflect changes in their atmospheric loading, with high confidence (16, 17).
Isotopic composition of dust allows "fingerprinting" of source regions (18). Major ions provide information on sea salt, continental dust, and biogenic contributions; pollen tracks productivity on land nearby; methane sulfonate responds to oceanic productivity; and other insights are possible. Cosmogenic and extraterrestrial indicators also are of interest for some studies.Gases. Trapped gases in ice-core bubbles are highly reliable records of atmospheric composition, as shown by intercomparisons among cores from different ice sheets and intercomparison with instrumental records and the air in firn above the bubble-trapping depth (19, 20). The slight differences between bubble and air composition caused by gravitational and thermal effects are well understood and recognizable (8). Chemical reactions in impure ice can produce anomalous compositions for some gases (21). However, the ice chemistry warns of trouble, and the close association of the gas and ice-chemistry anomalies, rather than being offset by the age difference between gas records and ice records of a climate change, is a clear indicator (5, 21).
Methane is of particular interest in studying abrupt changes. It was primarily "swamp gas" in preindustrial times and thus gives an indication of global wetland area (22). Methane destruction occurs globally, but sources may be localized. The residence time in the atmosphere is short enough that when methane sources are predominantly in the Northern Hemisphere, Greenland ice shows significantly higher methane concentrations than similar-age samples from the Antarctic; hence, changes in the concentration difference between Greenland and Antarctica record changes in the latitudinal distribution of methane sources (5, 22-24).| |
Ice-Core Results |
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Changes in Greenland. The ice-core records from the Greenland Ice Core Project and Greenland Ice Sheet Project 2 (GISP2) deep cores (Fig. 1) in central Greenland often are used as reference standards for abrupt climate changes. These records provide annual resolution for some indicators through 110,000 years (older ice has been disturbed by ice flow; refs. 4 and 5) and provide an exceptionally clear picture of events in Greenland (temperature and accumulation), regionally (wind-blown sea salt and continental dust), and more broadly (trapped-gas records, especially of methane).
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8°C warming (8, 25) and
2×
increases in snow accumulation (9), several-fold or larger drops in
wind-blown materials (17), and
50% increase in methane, indicating
large changes in global wetland area (5, 24).
For the best-characterized warming, the end of the Younger Dryas
cold interval
11,500 years ago, the transition in many ice-core variables was achieved in three steps, each spanning
5 years and in
total covering
40 years (26). However, most of the change occurred
in the middle of these steps. The warming as recorded in gas isotopes
occurred in decades or less (8). The most direct interpretation of the
accumulation-rate record is that snowfall doubled over 3 years and
nearly doubled in 1 year (9). Several records show enhanced variability
near this and other transitions, including "flickering" behavior
in which climate variables bounced between their "cold" level and
their "warm" level before settling in one of them (27).
The methane increase at the end of the Younger Dryas began 0-30 years
(one sample) after the warming in Greenland, suggesting atmospheric
transmission of the signal from the north Atlantic region to methane
source regions (8). The relative changes in methane concentrations in
Greenland and Antarctica indicate that the increase at the end of the
Younger Dryas involved both tropical and high-latitude sources (24,
25), and that the previous large increase about 14,700 years ago was
dominated by the tropics (25).
Other Greenland data also show that the climate changes were
geographically extensive. The isotopic composition of dust in Greenland
ice indicates an Asian source (19), and the sea salt is oceanic. The
large changes observed in dust and sea salt indicate reorganizations of
weather patterns well beyond Greenland. The changes in snow
accumulation were larger than can be explained by the effect of
temperature changes on the saturation vapor pressure (28), indicating
changes in storm tracks. Available data indicate that not all
transitions were identical, and further analyses certainly are
desirable, but most abrupt changes seem to have exhibited broadly
similar patterns.
Geographic Coverage. The ice-core record of abrupt climate changes is clearest in Greenland. No other record is available that spans the same time interval with equally high time resolution, complicating interpretations. It appears, however, that ice cores from the Canadian arctic islands, high mountains in South America, and Antarctica contain indications of the abrupt changes. Dating is secure for some of the Antarctic cores.
The Canadian arctic cores show a sharp cold reversal during the deglaciation that is probably the Younger Dryas event (29). Ice cores from the high peaks of Huascaran and Sajama in the Andes also show a deglacial reversal in the ice isotopes that may be correlative with the Younger Dryas (2, 30). However, for various reasons, the exact timing and abruptness of the changes are difficult to ascertain in these records, and records of older abrupt changes are even less secure. In Antarctica the Byrd core from West Antarctica, and probably the Vostok and some other cores from East Antarctica, show events that are correlative to the larger millennial events of Greenland, including the Younger Dryas (6, 31). Byrd and Vostok also contain indications of events that may be correlative to nearly all of the Greenland events (31). However, the ice isotopes indicate an antiphase behavior, with Byrd warm during the major events when Greenland was cold; dating control is not good enough to determine the phase of the smaller events. The general impression of the Antarctic events is that they are smaller and less abrupt than those in Greenland, although fewer paleothermometers and other indicators have been brought to bear in Antarctica, reducing confidence somewhat. To further complicate the issue, the Taylor Dome core from a near-coastal site in East Antarctica appears to be in-phase with Greenland and out-of-phase with Byrd during the deglacial interval centered on the Younger Dryas (32). As reviewed in ref. 33, non-ice records from broadly distributed sites in the Northern Hemisphere indicate large, abrupt changes (near-)synchronous with those in Greenland, with generally cold, dry, and windy conditions occurring together although with some sites wet perhaps because of storm-track shifts (cf. ref. 28). Some Southern Hemisphere sites also exhibit the Greenland pattern during the deglaciation, although high-resolution (annually resolved) southern records are still lacking. However, southern sites near and downwind of the south Atlantic show an anti-Greenland pattern with millennial warming when Greenland cooled, superimposed on the slower orbital variations, which are broadly synchronous in both hemispheres.| |
Insights |
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The implications of these events are covered in other papers in this issue of PNAS and are reviewed by ref. 33, among others. Briefly, the circulation of warm ocean waters supplies wintertime warmth around the north Atlantic, and some of that warmth is transported by the Atlantic across the equator from the Southern Hemisphere. This circulation can be slowed or stopped by fresh water supplied to the north Atlantic. A north Atlantic cooling triggers other processes that propagate a cool, dry windy signal through the atmosphere into the trade-wind belt. Very strong feedback processes and hysteresis behavior (34) have caused the changes to be abrupt. The larger of the northern changes especially involved loss of the cross-equatorial flow, leaving heat in the south Atlantic (35), and the southern response involves the complex interplay of the atmospheric cooling signal and the oceanic warming there.
One abrupt century-long cold event
8,200 years ago is prominent in
Greenland and other records and affected methane significantly (36).
Temperatures before and after this event in Greenland and many other
regions were slightly higher than recently, showing that warmth is not
a guarantee of climate stability. Abrupt changes have been especially
large when atmospheric carbon-dioxide concentration, insolation, and
other important climatic variables were changing rapidly, with possible
implications for general behavior of the climate system.
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Acknowledgements |
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I thank J. Severinghaus, T. Stocker, numerous colleagues at GISP2 and the Greenland Ice Core Project, the U.S. 109th Air National Guard, the Polar Ice Coring Office, the GISP2 Science Management Office, the U.S. National Ice Core Lab, the U.S. National Science Foundation for funding, E. Brook, K. Cuffey, P. Grootes, P. Mayewski, J. Severinghaus, T. Sowers, their colleagues, and the National Snow and Ice Data Center, University of Colorado at Boulder, and the World Data Center-A for Paleoclimatology, National Geophysical Data Center, Boulder, CO, for data.
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Abbreviation |
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GISP2, Greenland Ice Sheet Project 2.
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Footnotes |
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* To whom reprint requests should be addressed. E-mail: ralley{at}essc.psu.edu.
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