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Lecture 10: Orbital Control of Ice Sheets

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Presentation on theme: "Lecture 10: Orbital Control of Ice Sheets"— Presentation transcript:

1 Lecture 10: Orbital Control of Ice Sheets
(Chapter 9)

2 Ice sheet cover at 20,000 years ago The Last Glacial Maximum (LGM)

3 Ice-sheet balance Slow Accumulation vs. fast Ablation Implication:
Annual mean temperature Implication: which season is most important for ice sheet? Winter vs. summer

4 Milankovitch theory Small tilt +Aphelion =>low summer insolation
favor glaciation Large tilt + Perihelion => High summer insolation favor deglaciation

5 Milankovitch theory High summer insolation => net melting => deglaciation Low summer insolation => net accumulation => glaciation

6 The Last Glacial Maximum (LGM): 21,000 yrs ago
Why the greatest ice sheet not over Siberia?

7 How does Insolation Control Ice Sheet
Equilibrium line, Climate point and ice-sheet formation Cold Warm

8 High insolation northern/high equilibrium line northern climate point less ice-sheet formation Low insolation southern/low equilibrium line southern climate point more ice-sheet formation

9 Two positive feedbacks
Ice-albedo feedback Ice-elevation feedback

10 Thermal inertial and Phase lag
Ice volume lags insolation mdT/dt = SeiΩt-bT

11 Phase lag Ice volume lags Insolation by about ¼ cycle
(ocean effect on seasonal cycle!)

12 Bedrock sinking Bedrock sinking and Bedrock rebound

13 Bedrock feedbacks Bedrock feedbacks:
Initial elastic response is negative feedback; Later viscous response is positive feedback relative to the elastic sinking response by producing a delayed sinking response

14 The cycle of ice-sheet growth and decay

15 Conceptual model for ice-sheet cycle:
Repeat constant insolation Threshold temperature: 0oC summer, -10oC annual mean

16 Deep sea 18O and ice volume history
18O ~ O18/O16 O16 light, easy to evaporate Deep sea higher 18O  more ice volume over land (evaporated to be accumulated)

17 Quantify δ18O changes Δ (18Oland*land ice volume)+ Δ( 18Oocean*ocean volume)=0 18Oland* Δ land ice volume + Δ 18Oocean* ocean volume=0 1/(-40) = 18Oocean/ 18Oland = -Δ land ice volume / ocean volume = -100m sl/4000m sl = -1/40

18 Deep sea 18O and ice volume history
~1o/oo Small glaciation phase Large glaciation phase

19 Revival of Milankovith Theory
1976 but, relative magnitude ?

20 Insolation Forcing and Ice Volume Response
Small glaciation phase Large glaciation phase The remaining question: 100 kyr cycle?

21 Ice sheet 18O in the last 150,000 years Dominant 100 kyr cycle, why?
0 ka: Interglacial 21 ka: Last Glacial Maximum 125 ka: Last interglacial

22 Ice Core 18O in the last 100,000 years
is it ice volume effect?

23 Confirming sea level change
Coral reefs lives in coastal water – a proxy of sea level

24 Uplifted coral reef terraces:
New Guinea (western Pacific)

25 Uplift of coral reefs: Quantifying the ice volume from the sea level change -110m (115ka) to +6m (125ka)

26 Sea Level Reconstruction of the last 30 kyr
LGM IPCC/AR

27 References for Further reading and analysis
Hays et al., 1976, Variations in the Earth’s Orbit: pacemaker of the ice ages.” Science, 194, 1121- P. Huybers, C. Wunsch, Nature 434, 491 (2005). P. Huybers, 2006, Early Pleistocene Glacial Cycles and the Integrated Summer Insolation Forcing. Science, 313,

28 End of Lecture 10

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