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Glacial-Interglacial Changes in Climate Variability

Climate proxy records of very long duration (e.g., ice cores, sea sediment cores) allow discrimination of climate variability on millennial timescales. Hammer [1980] used conductivity measurements of ice cores to record the dates and frequency of massive volcanic eruption in the Northern Hemisphere. His analysis highlighted a frequency of approximately one major eruption every thousand years from 1390 B.C. (Thera, Aegean Sea) to 1912 A.D. (Katmai, Alaska). Because volcanic eruptions often release substantial quantities of aerosols to the atmosphere, their occurrence influences albedo, cloud formation and thus, climate. The 40,000-year record of dust concentrations measured in the ice of the Dunde core, China [ Thompson et al., 1989] reflected several-thousand year periods of warming and cooling, in which more abrupt changes were embedded. The 41,000-year GISP2 record from Greenland showed atmospheric response to massive iceberg discharge events, with major ion, dust, and isotope peaks at frequencies of a few to several thousand years [ Mayewski et al., 1994]. The 250,000-year Greenland record studied by Dansgaard et al. [1993] also permits examination of the frequency and timing of glacial-interglacial cycling. The core revealed 24 interstadials (IS #1-24) from the Bø lling (14 kyr BP) to 110 kyr BP, which range from nearly 10,000 years apart to 2,000 years apart (e.g., IS #16, 17). Jouzel et al. [1993] examined the Antarctic Vostok core and found rates of temperature change as high as 12C over 15 kyr. Yiou et al. [1991] used nonparametric spectral techniques to investigate cyclic patterns of climate variation in ice core records. Their analyses revealed stable cycles with periods of 11.1, 6.0, 4.4, 3.5, 2.7, and 2.4 kyr. The irregular pattern of cyclicity led the authors to conclude that nonlinear feedback mechanisms must play an important role in paleoclimatic variability.

Sea sediments, with the exception of cores from the Norwegian Sea [ Lehman and Keigwin, 1992], are often not of high enough resolution to record fast oscillations of the climate system, but they are of long enough duration to record rates of change for slower events. Ruddiman and McIntyre [1981] studied carbonate productivity in sea sediment cores from the North Atlantic to determine rates of change of ice volume during the last deglaciation. They concluded that slightly more than 50% of Northern Hemisphere ice disappeared in 3,000 yrs (16 to 13 kyr BP). Despite the oceanic cooling of 7 to 10C over the 1,000-year Younger Dryas event (12-11 kyr BP) the present sea ice regime was fully established by 6,000 yr BP [ Ruddiman and McIntyre, 1981]. Recently, Bond et al. [1992] reported 5- to 10,000-year intervals between periods of marked decreases in sea surface temperature and salinity (>10C and 1%, respectively) which are inconsistent with Milankovitch periodicities (23, 41, and 100 thousand year cycles) as a causal mechanism.

Sediments deposited in the lakes of Africa, central Europe, and the southeastern United States also record slow oscillations of the climate system. Sediments from the Sahel (Niger) and Sahara (Algeria) deposited during the last deglaciation mark a two-step transition from arid to humid conditions that was synchronous in the two regions [ Gasse et al., 1990]. The transition was inferred to be consistent with global changes in ocean and atmospheric dynamics at that time because the phase of maximum aridity in Africa falls within the cold Younger Dryas chronozone of Europe. The transitions, recorded as O, are approximately -7% over 1-2 kyr. This corresponds to roughly 5-10C/kyr, assuming that 5% O values are associated with temperature changes of 7C as given by Dansgaard et al. [1989]. Talbot and Johannessen [1992] also reported the occurrence of major dry intervals in Africa immediately following the Last Glacial Maximum (18 kyr BP). Their record revealed oscillations between shallow, brackish water (i.e., dry conditions) lasting 6 kyr during the Pleistocene and deep, dilute, periodically overflowing conditions lasting 4-10 kyr before and after the dry episode (25 and 5 kyr BP). Rapid changes were observed in a study of loess input to Lake Constance, in the Alps of central Europe [ Niessen et al., 1992]. These lake cores showed a regular pattern of spring deposition reflecting stable, arid, windy conditions of the Older Dryas time period, followed by a 1,000-year transition to a milder climate that preceded the onset of the Bø lling/Allerø d climate amelioration by 1 kyr. Pollen from Lake Tulane, Florida, indicate shifts between pine forests ( Pinus) during wetter conditions and open oak savanna ( Quercus) during drier periods of the past [ Grimm et al., 1993]. Time series analysis of these data depicted a dominant periodicity between the two primary vegetation types of 5,700 years and a less persistent 1,224-year frequency.

While different types of records (e.g., sea sediments versus ice cores) tend to highlight variability in the earth climate system over different timescales, the combination of available evidence has shown that the system varies appreciably on a variety of timescales, and that it is the overlapping of these cycles of variability that makes identification of patterns, and thus predictions of future climate, challenging.



next up previous
Next: Thresholds and Nonlinearities Up: Variability in the earth Previous: Rates of Change



U.S. National Report to IUGG, 1991-1994
Rev. Geophys. Vol. 33 Suppl., © 1995 American Geophysical Union