Harvard study reinforces need to address greenhouse gas emissions
By Summit Voice
SUMMIT COUNTY â" Harvard scientists say their latest research offers yet more proof that carbon dioxide is the key culprit when it comes to global warming.
In a research paper published April 5 in Nature, the scientists compiled ice and sedimentary core samples collected from dozens of locations around the world, and found evidence that, while changes in Earthâs orbit may have touched off a warming trend, increases in CO2 played a far more important role in pushing the planet out of the ice age.
âOrbital changes are the pacemaker. Theyâre the trigger, but they donât get you too far,â lead author Jeremy Shakun, a visiting postdoctoral fellow in Earth and Planetary Science Shakun, said. âOur study shows that CO2 was a much more important factor, and was really driving worldwide warming during the last deglaciation.â
Though scientists have known for many years, based on studies of Antarctic ice cores, that deglaciations over the last million years and spikes in CO2 were connected, establishing a clear cause-and-effect relationship between CO2 and global warming from the geologic record has remained difficult, Shakun said. In fact, when studied closely, the ice-core data indicate that CO2 levels rose after temperatures were already on the increase, a finding that has often been used by global warming skeptics to bolster claims that greenhouse gases do not contribute to climate change.
Many climate scientists have addressed the criticism and shown that the lag between temperature and CO2 increases means that greenhouse gases were an amplifier, rather than trigger, of past climate change, but Shakun and his colleagues saw a larger problem â" while CO2 measurements taken from air bubbles in the ice cores reflect levels throughout the global atmosphere, temperatures recorded in the ice only reflect local Antarctic conditions.
To get a more accurate picture of the relationship between global temperature and CO2, they synthesized dozens of core samples â" 80 in all â" collected from around the world.
âWe have ice cores from Greenland, people have cored the sea floor all around the world, theyâve cored lakes on the continents, and they have worked out temperature histories for all these sites,â Shakun said. âPutting all of these records together into a reconstruction of global temperature shows a beautiful correlation with rising CO2 at the end of the ice age. Even more interesting, while CO2 trails Antarctic warming, it actually precedes global temperature change, which is what you would expect if CO2 is causing the warming.
âThe previous science clearly said that CO2 had something to do with warming,â Shakun added. âIt has gone up and down in tandem with the ice ages, so it is clearly involved. If it was an amplifier, the question was how big of an amplifier? Does it explain a lot of climate change, or was it a small piece, and other factors were more important? I think this research really points a strong finger at the idea that CO2 was a major player.â
Armed with that evidence, Shakun and colleagues were able to sketch out how a series of factors aligned that eventually led to a worldwide warming trend and the end of the ice age.
Most scientists now believe, Shakun said, that the first domino wasnât an increase in greenhouse gases, but a gradual change in Earthâs orbit. That orbital change resulted in more sunlight hitting the northern hemisphere. As the ice sheets over North America and Europe melted, millions of gallons of fresh water flooded into the North Atlantic and disruped the cyclical flow of ocean currents.
âOcean circulation works like a global conveyor belt,â Shakun said. âThe reason itâs important for climate is because itâs moving heat around. If you look at it today, the northern hemisphere is on average, a couple degrees warmer than the south, and thatâs partly because the ocean is pulling heat northward as it flows across the equator in the Atlantic.
âBut if you turn the conveyor belt off, itâs going to warm the south because youâre no longer stealing that heat away. Warming the southern hemisphere, in turn, shifts the winds and melts back sea ice that had formed a cap, trapping carbon in the deep ocean.â
As more and more CO2 enters the atmosphere, Shakun said, the global warming trend continues, âand pretty soon youâre headed out of an ice age.â
While the research strengthens the link between CO2 and the Ice Ages, Shakun believes it also reinforces the importance of addressing CO2-driven climate change in our own time.
âI donât think this tells us anything fundamentally new about global warming,â Shakun said. âMost scientists are not in doubt about the human-enhanced greenhouse effect â" there are nearly a dozen strong pieces of evidence that it is affecting global climate. This is just one more log on the fire that confirms it.â
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Filed under: climate and weather, Environment, global warming Tagged: | carbon dioxide, climate change, CO2, Environment, global warming, ice age, Thermohaline circulation
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