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Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?
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Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Mar 30, 2015

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Santino Esmay
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Page 1: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Climate Proxies

How can you measure the climate of the past?

Page 2: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Learner outcomes

At the end of this lecture you should be able to

1. Describe how proxies differ from observations

2. Describe how tree rings, corals, fossils, lake ice and lake duration are used to estimate local climate

3. Describe how ocean sediment and ice cores are used to estimate global climate

4. The difference between stable and radiometric isotopes and what type of information they tell use about past climates

Page 3: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Proxies

Unlike instrumental records that tell us only about the most recent century, proxy records (natural archives of climate change) enable us to place recent climatic change in the context of the last several hundred to thousand years.

Page 4: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Temperature (Northern Hemisphere) CO2 Concentrations

1000 Years of CO2 and Global Warming

Page 5: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

How do we develop proxies?

• Assumptions• Observations of phenomenon today• Link current observations to past records

Page 6: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Assumptions

• Observation: Solar radiation varies but overall decreases

• Therefore solar radiation in the past was higher

Page 7: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Proxies• Corals*• Tree rings*• Pollen*• Fossils*• Sea level• Lake ice duration*• Ocean sediments• Ice Cores

*indicative more of local climate change than global climate change

Page 8: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Corals• Shells made of Calcium Carbonate

(CaCO3)

• Shell in equilibrium with the ocean water• Band width provided evidence of

temperature the coral grew in• Growth rates change with ocean

temperatures, pH levels• Local climate

Page 9: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Why should we hug trees?• Dendrochronology is the study of the annual variability

of tree ring widths, which can be extended back to 8000 years ago.

• The study of trees provides climate information regarding temperature, runoff, precipitation, and soil moisture.

• Local climate Date of last ring isyear tree was cut

1930 1950 1970

19101890

1870

Page 10: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Tree Rings

Growth conditions recorded in rings• Wide ring-warm days sufficient water• Narrow-cold days/drought

Page 11: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

What can plant and animal fossils tell us about ancient climates?

• Certain plants and animals live only in specific environments, so their presence is a clue to local climate.

These 350 Ma fossil ferns were most likely the oldest on land, and likely required high pCO2

levels.

A trilobite, the three- lobed king of warm, shallow Cambrian seas

Soft-bodied Waptia, an arthropod from the Cambrian Burgess

Shale

Page 12: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Lake Monona Ice Duration 1855-2005

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

180

1855 1875 1895 1915 1935 1955 1975 1995

Seasons

Du

rati

on

of

Ice

(day

s)

Source: Wisconsin State Climatology Office

Page 13: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Examples of Climate Proxies• Pollen Lake Ice Duration• Tree Rings Lake Ice Thickness• Ice Cores

Page 14: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Global Proxies

• Sea level• Ocean sediment• Ice cores

– Layers (varves) in ice cores– Gases in ice cores– Stable Isotopes: O-16 to O-18 ratio in ice

cores– Radiometric Isotopes:Carbon dating of

sediment in the ice cores or glacial deposits

Page 15: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Sea Level

• Glaciation –low sea level

Page 16: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Ocean Sediment Cores: 3-3.5km

• Thick levels of sedimentation can indicate heavy weathering, warmer temperatures

• Volcanic sediments• Loss of sediment

layers through erosion

• 55 mya

Page 17: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Frozen Core Some cores go 3 km deep!

Page 18: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Vostok, Antarctica 78°28' S, 106°48'E: Coldest

Places on Earth•

                                         

Vostok Station Nationality: Russia

Location: Vostok  - an outpost if there ever was one - is located near the South Geomagnetic Pole, at the center of the East Antarctic ice sheet, where the flux in the earth's electromagnetic field is manifested.

The coldest recorded

temperature on Earth, -128.6°F (-

89.2°C) was measured here on

July 21, 1983.

Ice core drilling 3.4 km to go ½ million

years into past climate

Page 19: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Ice Cores: Varves

• A varve is an annual layer of sediment or sedimentary rock

Page 20: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Section of Greenland Cores

Dozen Ice Ages going back 1 billion years

Page 21: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

How can ancient greenhouse gases be trapped?

• Atmospheric gases (CO2, CH4, SO2, etc.) can be trapped in glaciers as frozen water metamorphoses from snow to firn to recrystallized ice.

The record of atmosphere CO2 since the Industrial

Revolution

During the Last Glacial Maximum pCO2 is

estimated at 180 ppm

Page 22: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Ice Core Thermometer

Page 23: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Isotopes

• Stable Isotopes-temperature• Radiometric dating-rate and date

Page 24: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

How can oxygen isotopes used as paleoclimate proxies?

• isotope -- atoms of the same element with the same atomic number (chemical properties) but differing atomic weight (physical properties). Differ in number of neutrons.

• Oxygen is composed mostly of 16O and 18O, which as part of water molecules are separated by physical processes.

A typical carbon atom with 6 protons and 6 neutrons and

6 electrons.

Page 25: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Fractionation

• To divide or separate into parts• Ocean water is made up of both O-16 and

O-18

There is a standard or average ratio of O-18 to O-16 (standard mean ocean water as the baseline, SMOW)

• Certain physical and biological processes change the ratio (this is fractionation)

Page 26: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Oxygen Isotopic Ratios or Amounts

O18/O16 ratio in glacial ice indicate the atmosphere temperature in which the snow that made up the ice formed

Extent of isotopic difference (fractionation) is dependent on the temperature.

So they form a temperature proxy!

Page 27: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Oxygen Isotopic Ratios vs. Amounts

O18/O16 ratio versus O-18 and O-16

Usually described as a ratio

Page 28: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Oxygen Fractionation Summary

• If ratio O-18 to O-16 is higher than expected in the ocean, colder temperatures

• If ratio O-18 to O-16 is lower than expected in the ocean, warmer temperatures

Page 29: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Oxygen Isotopes in Glacier Ice

• Polar ice is preferentially enriched with O-16 relative to the ocean (O-16 locked in glacier ice). So especially during glaciation ocean water is “heavy”

• Why is glacier ice “light”?– The water source is from precipitation which

is preferentially light.• So during a glaciation you would expect

remaining ocean water to be heavy

Page 30: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Radiometric Isotopes

• Isotopes that decay (Carbon) can tell us the approximate date of an event or the rate at which an event took place – Glacial retreat

Page 31: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Carbon Dating: Rate of Glacial Retreat

Page 32: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Greenland Ice Sheet and Arctic: Northern Hemisphere

Page 33: Climate Proxies How can you measure the climate of the past?

Antarctica: South Pole