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Fri, 26 Sep 2003 18:25:30 +0100

 

ISIS Special Miniseries - Abrupt Climate Change Happening

press-release

 

The Institute of Science in Society

Science Society Sustainability

http://www.i-sis.org.uk

 

General Enquiries sam

Website/Mailing List press-release

ISIS Director m.w.ho

===================================================

 

ISIS Special Miniseries

 

Abrupt Climate Change Happening

 

 

 

‘Climate change’ conjures up a picture of a gradual process occurring in the

timescale of the earth, hundreds if not thousands of years. Not anymore. Since

the mid 1990s, scientists have been asking if climate change might be abrupt, in

other words, it could happen suddenly, over a matter of decades or even years,

and be global in extent. Dr. Mae-Wan Ho reports.

 

 

The picture most people and most policy-makers have of climate change is the one

produced by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which gives

smooth projections of global warming ranging from 1 to 6 C by the end of this

century, depending on the computer models used. All the models assume processes

occur smoothly and linearly, however, and do not predict abrupt change.

 

 

Real earth processes, however, are nonlinear, often involving positive feedback

and threshold effects that give rise to abrupt, catastrophic jumps or swings

between different states.

 

 

As more and more data on ancient climate accumulate, it has become clear that

abrupt climate change is a reality on many differentscales, and has occurred

many times in the past.

 

 

One way to test a climate model that predicts the future is to see how well it

post-dicts the past. For example, nine major ice ages have been found in the

geological record, alternating with periods of abrupt global warming. Can the

model predict those given reasonable starting conditions?

 

 

 

How to read the earth’s temperature

Geological records of temperatures can be read by various means. Over the recent

past, scientists look at the growth history of trees that are hundreds and even

thousands of years old. The rings give a record of yearly growth and are thicker

during warmer years.

 

 

Over periods of tens to hundreds of thousands of years, records come from

drilling ice from areas of permafrost. Ice is H2O, the great majority of oxygen

is the isotope oxygen 16, or 16O, a small proportion is the isotope oxygen

18,18O. Water containing 18O condenses from the air at a slightly higher

temperature than that containing 16O, so snow falling from colder air contains

less 18O, and the ratio of 18O: 16O provides an estimate of the temperature.

Similar methods can be used with other isotope ratios, such as deuterium to

hydrogen 2H:H. The ice also contains trapped air bubbles, which include gases of

interest such as carbon dioxide and methane, and calcium levels indicate

atmospheric dustiness.

 

 

The age of the ice can be determined by counting annual deposition layers back

to about 40 000 years ago. Beyond that, other methods, such as radioactive decay

dating are used. A core from “Dome C” in the Antarctica is expected to produce a

record stretching back 800 000 years

 

 

 

 

 

The earth has gone through cycles of rapid warming followed by freezing every

100 000 years or so, with sub-periodicities of 41 000 years, 23 000, 19 000, 10

000 years and shorter. And there is a remarkable correlation with the

concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere (Fig 1).

 

 

 

This close correlation between temperature and carbon dioxide concentration is

one of the reasons palaeoclimatologist Richard Alley at Pennsylvania State

University, USA, who studies ancient climate, believes human activities affect

climate. The recent rate of increase in atmospheric carbon dioxide simply has no

geological precedence in the known history of our earth (Fig. 2). A newly

published study from the University of East Anglia’s climatic research unit

confirms that since 1980, we have been experiencing the hottest climate for the

past 2 000 years.

 

 

How well do current climate models of the IPCC post-dict the past? They are much

better than people often give them credit for, Alley says. Climate changes show

up in the right places at the right times, but they just don’t produce the

large, abrupt changes seen in the real world.

 

 

At the very end of the ‘Younger Dryas’, a global cooling event between 13 000

and 11 500 years ago, average temperatures increased by about 6 C within a

decade in some places. A huge quantity of melt-water from North America poured

into the North Atlantic in a big hurry, and it got cold again. Average

temperatures fell by 6 C within a century.

 

 

And that could be due to effects on the thermohaline circulation – a huge

convection system that transports warm water from the tropics to the poles and

send cool water back through the depths of the oceans (see “Global warming and

then the big freeze”, this series).

 

 

Robert Dickson, hydrographer studying water movements at the Centre of

Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science in Lowestoft, Suffolk, believe

that abrupt climate change is already happening. Dickson has been monitoring

changes in the North Atlantic over the past 40 years. Within this period, all 10

of the warmest years since records began happened between 1990 and 2002. It also

includes extremes in the “North Atlantic Oscillation” – the wide swings in

atmospheric pressures between the polar and mid-latitude regions – that’s

responsible for climate variability in the region.

 

 

Dickson expects these changes to slowdown the THC and accelerate the global

water cycle between the atmosphere and the oceans.

 

 

Isolated measurements have already indicated an increased flux of freshwater

into the north Atlantic. At the same time, there is an increase in saltiness of

water further south, through to the equatorial south Atlantic, which can only be

explained by increased evaporation; and that would accelerate the water cycle

between the surface of the earth and its atmosphere. The Pacific and Indian

oceans also show increased salinity in the tropics and freshening near both

poles between the 1950s and 1990s. Water vapour is itself a greenhouse gas,

which would contribute to further warming, a positive feedback that could

precipitate abrupt change.

Policy-makers need to appreciate this abrupt change scenario, as it leaves

little room for slow ‘adaptation’. Instead, every effort must be concentrated

towards prompt action to ameliorate global warming and preventing the worst from

happening.

 

 

 

===================================================

This article can be found on the I-SIS website at http://www.i-sis.org.uk/

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===================================================

CONTACT DETAILS

The Institute of Science in Society, PO Box 32097, London NW1 OXR

telephone: [44 20 8731 7714] [44 20 7383 3376] [44 20 7272 5636]

 

General Enquiries sam

Website/Mailing List press-release

ISIS Director m.w.ho

 

MATERIAL IN THIS EMAIL MAY BE REPRODUCED IN ANY FORM WITHOUT PERMISSION, ON

CONDITION THAT IT IS ACCREDITED ACCORDINGLY AND CONTAINS A LINK TO

http://www.i-sis.org.uk/

 

 

 

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