Ice Ages and Delayed Feedbacks - Shakun et al.
Eli is posting a translation of an article by Jörg Zimmermann (one of the G&T six),
about the implications of Shakun et al, and how by clarifying much
about the feedbacks that bring the world out of the ice age it shakes a
core tenant of climate change denial. The implications, although Jörg
backs away a bit at the end in an overly scientific display of humility,
are world shattering.
------------------------
What
you write a lot about speaks to what you are concerned about. When
Vahrenholt and Lüning's concoction "The cold sun" appeared the extensive
PR campaign made it clear to me that it was a boring repetition of old
denier myths. [Eli recommends Rob van Dorland and Bart Verheggen analysis and reply on V&L]
When Bild, Focus and the Spiegel danced in rhythm to the denialists
melody, then you are compelled to respond. An article by Jeremy Shakun,
Clark, He, Marcott, Mix, Liu, Otto-Bliesner, Schmittner and Bard, Global Warming preceded by increasing carbon dioxide concentrations during the last deglaciation,
Nature 484, 49-54 ( 2012) is quite a different case. The article was
not accompanied by major media attention, but the content removes a leg
supporting a particular myth, and thus, lead to violent reactions among
those who exploit this myth. That they have so vigorously tried to explain
away the results of this recent scientific study reveals how close to
the bone they feel it hit.
I'm certainly not the right person to evaluate paleoclimate work. Fortunately, George Hoffman has done this on his blog, and he is definitely an expert in this field. And of course there are also posts at Skeptical Science, Real Climate
and good comments from the readers. The work of Shakun et al. 2012
nicely illustrates how complex the processes are that take place during
the strong climate changes following the end of an ice age. The
so-called Milankovich cycles lead to relatively minor changes in the
annual amount of solar radiation that reaches the surface and its
distribution over climatic zones that can only cause major changes in
the global climate through feedback effects. Calculation shows the need
for the feedback effects to reach the magnitude of changes in the
earth's energy budget needed to explain the difference in global
temperature between glacial and interglacial periods. It is ignorant to
pretend that changes in the solar insolation alone cause the ice ages.
It is believed that shorter winters can result in increased thawing of
snow and ice at high latitudes, thereby exposing surfaces that less
efficiently reflect the sun's rays into space. The Earth then enters a
phase in which a little more energy from the sun remains and gently
heats the ground. This is the first feedback loop: the thawing of ice
and snow reduces the albedo of the earth, its ability to reflect
radiation. The more the earth warms, the more ice and snow melts,
lowering further the albedo of the ground, and increasingly heating it.
That sounds like a feedback loop that increasingly accelerates, but it
is limited by the fact that a much hotter earth radiates more into space
and thus a new equilibrium is always established.
What
shifts this equilibrium further, is the greenhouse effect because if
the earth warms, for various reasons, the mixing ratio of carbon dioxide
in the atmosphere increases. This is the second feedback effect. Why
the mixing ratio of carbon dioxide rises when global temperature rises
is only partially clear. Although the ability the oceans to dissolve
carbon dioxide the oceans decreases with increasing temperature you can
calculate how much CO2 will outgas from the
oceans, and this is only a fraction of the measured change in the carbon
dioxide mixing ratio. Global warming leads to a further increase in
carbon dioxide emissions into the atmosphere, and we would like to
understand the mechanism. Another feedback effect is that a warmer
atmosphere can hold more water and therefore increases the humidity.
Since water is a greenhouse gas itself, an increased absolute humidity
leads to further warming, which in turn increases the absolute humidity.
Here, too, there is no "runaway" global warming. The increased
radiation from the earth into space will bring the energy budget of
Earth at some point into balance. This radiation increases with the
fourth power of temperature due to the Stefan-Boltzmann law, which
provides a reliable upper bound on the temperature. Therefore, changes
in global temperature the greater part of which are caused by feedbacks,
are by themselves evidence that a significant climate forcing exists.
How
do you discover the cause for the increase in carbon dioxide during a
global warming? First, it helps to track changes in the isotopic ratio
of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. In plants, the heavier isotope 13 C
is depleted, and if the productivity of vegetation decreases there will
be more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. We see this as a decrease in
the proportion of the total 13C-carbon in the atmosphere. The sinking of
organic matter from the upper oceans to the seabed can form a reservoir
for carbon with low levels of 13C. With appropriate experience, you can
put together the changes in isotopic distribution in these carbon
reservoirs and increases in atmospheric CO2 levels
and figure out that the degassing of dissolved carbon dioxide on the
surface plays only a minor role. Secondly, you need really good data on
the distribution and timing of temperature increases on the Earth in
relation to the increase of the CO2 mixing ratio, because then you can calculate the effect of outgassing of CO2
from the oceans reasonably well. For this it helps to have a model for
the carbon cycle which includes biological productivity, But there are
still more complications. It is not enough to know the radiation budget
in climate zones, how the albedo changes regionally, and how much
greenhouse gas is in the atmosphere. Heat transport in the ocean
currents also impacts the climate.
In the introduction I mentioned a myth. The myth is that the variation of solar radiation alone, neglecting feedbacks, could explain most about the ice ages. If someone like Richard Lindzen says that the earth climate sensitivity is very low, he says nothing else but that all the above listed feedbacks largely are offset by negative feedbacks such as changes in cloud cover. In that case, the increase in the CO2 mixing ratio during the interglacial periods would only be a consequence of warming with nothing else contributing. For deniers of global warming, this is mandatory, but there are also other deniers of man-made global warming who go further and rely on claiming that carbon dioxide is excluded as a feedback variable in the climate. Thus, if there is a publication in which one sees that the carbon dioxide mixing ratio follows the temperature change with a delay of 800 years, for such denialists that is convenient evidence that greenhouse gas did not influence the warming. What they overlook is the fact that there are many papers which correlate temperature and CO2 changes, and the time interval between warming and the increase in greenhouse gas concentration varies enormously between them. Dating errors are in fact significant, partly because the temperature rise differs from region to region by onset and rate. Therefore you need data with high regional resolution to know what is really happening. The work by Shakun et al. is so interesting because it gathers many years of temperature proxy data from different regions of the world, making it possible in detail to understand the course of warming after an ice age over time and by region. Together with the data on the carbon dioxide mixing ratios one can figure out what role the greenhouse gases play as feedback
Figure 2: a) Temperature trends as a function of latitude between 21.5 and 19 thousand years BCE (red) and 19-17.5 years BCE (blue). b) The change of temperature in thousands of years BCE for the indicated latitude bands. The arrows show the start of the warming and the begin of the rise in CO2 concentration. From Shakun, et al., 2012
Shakun et al. find that at the end of the last ice age temperature increased immediately in the Arctic but only slightly, probably as a result of increased radiation during the northern hemisphere summer. As a result a small portion of the Arctic ice melted. The melt water had a lower salt concentration and thus was less dense than the surface water and sank although mostly not to great depths. The result was that the AMOC and thus the associated redistribution of heat between the Arctic and the tropics was interrupted. This meant that the temperature in the high northern latitudes no longer rose, but may, in fact, have even decreased slightly. This is exactly what was found in the data. As a result, the temperature rose in the southern tropics and then the southern temperate latitudes and finally in Antarctica. Only then did the data show an increase in CO2. So somehow warming of the southern latitudes leads to increased emissions of CO2. Simultaneous determination of the isotopic ratio (for example, according to RF Anderson, S. Ali, LI Bradtmiller, SHH Nielsen, MQ Fleisher, BE Anderson, and LH Burckle, Wind-Driven Upwelling in the Southern Ocean and the Deglacial Rise in Atmospheric CO2, Science, 323 , 1443-1448 (2009).) suggests that the CO2 source is a consequence of biological fixation of carbon residues, for example in plankton deposited on the ocean floor. This increase in CO2 concentration is more than twice as strong as expected from outgassing of CO2 from warmer sea water alone. It indicates that the exchange with the Southern Ocean deep water became more intense and carbon deposits were transferred from the depths to the surface. Only after a significant temperature increase in the south and an increase in CO2 concentration, did the temperature rise again in the northern hemisphere. This is interpreted as providing a feedback mechanism for for greenhouse gases to drive global warming. The temperature data shows that after temperatures initially rise in the north they drop again. Apparently, the collapse of the AMOC, cuts off the flow of heat to the north from warm tropical sea water.
The compilation of regional resolved temperature time series makes it possible to divide such processes into single steps. It is critical to exactly date each temperature time series because without this the correct order of different temperature gradients at various latitudes will be lost. The data show that depending on the location of the temperature data there is a preceding or following change in the CO2 data. Viewed in context, this is just the greenhouse effect of CO2 and the associate feedback from increases in the absolute humidity during warming. The greenhouse effect of the additional water in the atmosphere, causes rapid changes in temperature of several degrees in a few thousand years. And what does this mean for today? It may mean that we must expect that global warming has a significant delay, perhaps hundreds of years, maybe more, which could lead to massive global changes - a change in ocean currents with rapid redistribution of global temperatures and an increase of natural CO2 sources that occur, even if man-made CO2 emissions have been long since cut back again and we actually expect that the CO2 mixing ratio would decrease again. Global warming does not stop immediately when manmade emissions of greenhouse gases disappear but has centuries-long repercussions. However, many questions remain open about the mechanism that leads to the natural CO2 emissions operate. Therefore it remains speculation as to whether additional natural CO2 and methane sources would be activated by man-made warming.
12 comments:
s/tenant/tenet/
Well, that would seem to be the end of the Holocene. Soylent Green and scavenging it will be.
Stopping the overturning circulation means cutting the access to the other water cooler on earth (Arctic) so it logically follows that if the rate of cool water formation around Antarctic doesn't increase, the southern hemisphere will warm. And the Antarctic didn't lose much ice during the previous big thaw. How it'll do this next time remains to be seen.
Sub-arctic Bunny
Helpful. Thank you, Eli.
As J Bowers said.
Humanity is committed to committing the planet to FUBAR.
Bernard J. Hyphen-Anonymous XVII, Esq.
The tenants are ready for rent control.
Pica
Spot wrote
I wish I lived in North Carolina where they have laws against such scary stuff.
Is he kidding when he says, "Therefore it remains speculation as to whether additional natural CO2 and methane sources would be activated by man-made warming."?
Looking at the last AGU conference in SF, and it is clear that there is a lot of "free" CH4 separated from the biosphere only by a relatively fragile layer of permafrost. Some of this permafrost is under the ESS,where it has been kept in good condition by the cold brine rejected during sea ice formation. As there is less sea ice formation, what is to keep the fresh water ice under the sea floor in good condition?
Well nothing really. And, we see CH4 on Barrow, AK hourly monitor at 2,500 ppbv. To me, this looks like a methane burp in the ESS as seen by sparse air monitoring equipment 400 miles away. It is not like this is a surprise; we have been seeing reports of increasing methane releases in the Arctic for years.
Any climate model that does not include carbon feed backs is not useful for planning, public policy, or engineering decisions.
The only worth while speculation is how fast Carbon Feedbacks will unfold.
It's increasingly clear that carbon cycle feedbacks are going to carry on warming the planet long after human come to their senses . . . presuming we eventually do.
As a silver lining, this should make a rational discussion about adaption/mitigation dead simple. The answer is:
* We are probably going to see +4C eventually.
* We need to adapt (designing new infrastructure, preparing for crop failures, moving stuff back from the coasts) for those impacts.
* At the same time we need intensive mitigation; radical emission cuts to try and make a +4C world a matter of CENTURIES of medium-speed feedbacks and not DECADES of civilization-suicide.
* Bleak as this is, it gets bleaker: we need to study geoengineering options for the possibility that we have set in motion changes that we can't adapt to.
> melt water had a lower salt concentration
> and thus was less dense than the surface water
> and sank
> although mostly not to great depths.
Something missing from that there; can you expand it a bit?
I hate to bring this subject up again but space based irradiance solutions are looking better and better all the time here.
Artificial weather will be better than no weather at all at this point.
Hank, I agree there's a problem with that sentence about melt water. I guessed that the melt water density was controlled by both salinity and temperature, and therefore it sank until it found an equilibrium that was less deep than it would have been if it were saltier. It should be made clearer what's going on there. It's an interesting and scary article.
Taylor B
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