Arctic Sediments Show That 20th Century Warming Is Unlike Natural Variation
ScienceDaily (Oct. 25, 2009)
— The possibility that climate change might simply be a natural
variation like others that have occurred throughout geologic time is
dimming, according to evidence in a Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences paper published October 19.
The research reveals that sediments retrieved by University at
Buffalo geologists from a remote Arctic lake are unlike those seen
during previous warming episodes.
The UB researchers and their international colleagues were able to
pinpoint that dramatic changes began occurring in unprecedented ways
after the midpoint of the twentieth century.
"The sediments from the mid-20th century were not all that different
from previous warming intervals," said Jason P. Briner, PhD, assistant
professor of geology in the UB College of Arts and Sciences. "But after
that things really changed. And the change is unprecedented."
The sediments are considered unique because they contain rare
paleoclimate information about the past 200,000 years, providing a far
longer record than most other sediments in the glaciated portion of the
Arctic, which only reveals clues to the past 10,000 years.
"Since much of the Arctic was covered by big ice sheets during the
Ice Age, with the most recent glaciations ending around 10,000 years
ago, the lake sediment cores people get there only cover the past
10,000 years," said Briner.
"What is unique about these sediment cores is that even though
glaciers covered this lake, for various reasons they did not erode it,"
said Briner, who discovered the lake in the Canadian Arctic while
working on his doctoral dissertation. "The result is that we have a
really long sequence or archive of sediment that has survived arctic
glaciations, and the data it contains is exceptional."
Working with Briner and colleagues at UB who retrieved and analyzed
the sediments, the paper's co-authors at the University of Colorado and
Queens University, experts in analyzing fossils of bugs and algae, have
pooled their expertise to develop the most comprehensive picture to
date of how warming variations throughout the past 200,000 years have
altered the lake's ecology.
"There are periods of time reflected in this sediment core that
demonstrate that the climate was as warm as today," said Briner, "but
that was due to natural causes, having to do with well-understood
patterns of the Earth's orbit around the sun. The whole ecosystem has
now shifted and the ecosystem we see during just the last few decades
is different from those seen during any of the past warm intervals."
Article Cont. Here