Ice ages Flashcards

1
Q

Glacial-interglacial periods

A
  • 2.5MYA to now
  • initiated by Milankovitch cycles
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2
Q

Milankovitch cycles

A
  • eccentricity, obliquity and precession
  • changes in the Earth’s orbit around the sun that influence how much sunlight the northern hemisphere receives
  • Milankovitch argued that climate is greatly influenced by energy received in summer in the northern hemisphere as the northern hemisphere has more land and ice, so lower heat capacity
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3
Q

eccentricity

A
  • shape of Earth’s orbit around the sun
  • varies from a circle to an ellipse
  • every 96,000 years
  • weakest effect of the Milankovitch cycles, but has significant seasonal effects when combined with precession
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4
Q

obliquity

A
  • tilt of the Earth’s axis of rotation
  • varies between 21.8 and 24.4 degrees over a period of 41,000 years
  • the larger the obliquity the greater the seasonal difference in solar energy
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5
Q

precession

A
  • Earth wobbles on its rotational axis
  • makes seasonal variations more extreme in the norther hemisphere and less extreme in the southern hemisphere
  • every 27,000 years
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6
Q

Walker circulation

A
  • developed 2MYA
  • the atmospheric east-west component of the Hadley cell that controls rainfall in the tropics
  • intensified gradient in sea surface temperatures between eastern and western pacific
  • triggered the development of ENSO
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7
Q

Mid-Pleistocene transition

A
  • after 800,000YA the 41,000 year cycle between glacial and interglacial periods changes to a 100,000 year cycle
  • the cycle become more intense and less stable, changes are more rapid once they are triggered as larger ice sheets are much more unstable
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8
Q

the last ice age

A
  • 21,000YA
  • sea level 120m lower, meaning USA and Asia and UK and Europe were linked
  • huge extent of ice caps covering Europe and Patagonia to New Zealand
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9
Q

Heinrich events

A
  • in Pleistocene
  • large groups of icebergs break away from Laurentide glacier in North America and float across North Atlantic, hitting Northern Europe
  • colder conditions in North America and Europe
  • decrease in salinity in North Atlantic meant that NADW couldn’t form, switching off the global deep ocean conveyer belt
  • worldwide climatic impacts
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10
Q

evidence for Heinrich events

A
  • marine sediment cores in Atlantic show sediment scattered by melting icebergs
  • evidence of 2-3C temperature drop in Greenland ice-core records
  • gouges in French coast where icebergs have run aground
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11
Q

Holocene

A
  • interglacial period 10,000Ya to now
  • unstable period in global climate
  • global temperatures have been a few degrees higher than present
  • cold arid event 4,200YA linked to collapse of numerous civilisations
  • little ice age
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12
Q
A
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