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Cave
Records Provide Clues to Climate Change
Wednesday, September 26, 2007
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Top
Image
Kim
Cobb
Georgia
Tech Assistant Professor Kim Cobb taking a water sample.
Photo
Credit: Alan Cressler, copyright 2006.
Bottom
Image
Jud
Partin
Georgia
Tech graduate researcher Jud Partin descending a slope in the
Boreno caves.
Photo
Credit: Alan Cressler, copyright 2006.
When Georgia Tech Assistant
Professor Kim Cobb and graduate student Jud Partin wanted to
understand the mechanisms that drove the abrupt climate change
events that occurred thousands of years ago, they didn’t
drill for ice cores from the glaciers of Greenland or the icy
plains of Antarctica, as is customary for paleoclimatolgists.
Instead, they went underground.
Growing inside the caves of the
tropical Pacific island of Borneo are some of the keys to
understanding how the Earth’s climate suddenly changed -
several times - over the last 25,000 years. By analyzing
stalagmites, the pilar-like rock formations that stem from the
ground in caves, they were able to produce a high-resolution and
continuous record of the climate over this equatorial rainforest.
"These stalagmites are, in essence, tropical ice
cores forming over thousands of years,” said Partin. “Each
layer of the rock contains important chemical traces that help us
determine what was going on in the climate thousands of years
ago, much like the ice cores drilled from Greenland or
Antarctica.”
The tropical Pacific currently plays a
powerful role in shaping year-to-year climate variations around
the globe (as evidenced by the number of weather patterns
influenced by the Pacific’s El Nino), but its role in past
climate change is less understood. Partin and Cobb’s
results suggest that the tropical Pacific played a much more
active role in some of the abrupt climate change events of
Earth’s past than was once thought and may even have played
a leading role in some of these changes.
Polar ice cores
reveal that the Northern Hemisphere and the Southern Hemisphere
each have their own distinct patterns of abrupt climate change;
the tropical Pacific may provide the mechanistic link between the
two systems. Understanding how the climate changes occurred and
what they looked like is important to helping scientists put into
context the current trends in today’s climate. They
published their findings in the Sept 27, 2007, issue of the
journal Nature.
The research team collected stalagmites
from the Gunung Buda cave system in Borneo in 2003, 2005
and 2006. Analyzing three stalagmites from two separate
caves allowed the pair to create a near-continuous record of the
climate from 25,000 years ago to the present. While this
study is not the first to use stalagmites to examine climate over
this time period, it is the first to do so in the tropical
Pacific. Typically, in these types of studies, only one
stalagmite is analyzed, but Partin and Cobb compared their three
stalagmite records to isolate shared climate-related signals.
Stalagmites are formed as rain
water, mixed with calcium carbonate and other elements, makes its
way through the ground and onto the cave floor. As this solution
drips over time, it hardens in layers, creating a column of rock.
Partin and Cobb cut open each stalagmite and took 1,300
measurements of their chemical content to determine the relative
moisture of the climate at various periods in history starting
from the oldest layers at the bottom to the present at the top.
They dated the rocks by analyzing the radioactive decay of
uranium and thorium, and determined the amount of precipitation
at given times by measuring the ratio of oxygen isotopes.
"Our
records contain signatures of both Northern and Southern
Hemisphere climate influences as the Earth emerged from the last
ice age, which makes sense given its equatorial location,”
said Cobb. “However, tropical Pacific climate was not a
simple linear combination of high-latitude climate events. It
reflects the complexity of mechanisms linking high and low
latitude climate.”
For example, Partin and Cobb’s
records suggest that the tropical Pacific began drying
about 20,000 years ago and that this trend may have
pre-conditioned the North Atlantic for an abrupt climate change
event that occurred about 16,500 years ago, known as the
Heinrich 1 event. "In addition, the Borneo records
indicate that the tropical Pacific began to get wetter before the
North Atlantic recovered from the Heinrich 1 event 14,000
years ago. Perhaps the tropical Pacific is again driving that
trend,” said Partin.
"Currently our knowledge
of how these dramatic climate changes occurred comes from just a
few sites,” said Cobb. “As more studies are done from
caves around the world, hopefully we'll be able to piece together
a more complete picture of these changes. Understanding how the
dominoes fell is very important to our understanding of our
current warming trend.”
Source:
Georgia Institute of Technology
Time
Stamp: 9/26/2007 at 2:40:10 PM CST

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