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OLD ICE YIELDS NEW CLIMATE
INFORMATION
By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence
COLUMBUS,
Ohio (June 19, 1997)- A core of ice drilled by researchers on a Tibetan
glacier may yield climatological information going back half a million
years.
The core was obtained by a international team of researchers five years
ago at the Guliya Ice Cap, a 77-square-mile glacier sitting 22,014 feet
high in the Kunlun Shan Mountains.The team, headed by Ohio State professor
of geological sciences Lonnie Thompson used mechanical and thermal
drills to remove a 1,012-foot core from the ice cap.
Five years later, the OSU team has reconstructed a climate history going
back 130,000 years. The researchers cut the core into 34,800 samples that
were then tested for oxygen isotope ratios, dust, pollen, and nitrate,
chloride and sulfate ions. Each of these give clues to the climate in the
area at the time the ice originally formed. The researchers believe the
oldest ice in the core to be as old as 500,000 years.
The ice record shows that during the last glacial sequence there were
three or four periods called interstadials
when the temperature warmed to more like those today. These warm events
occurred when methane, a greenhouse gas,
was more abundant in the Earth's atmosphere. These warmer interstadials,
along with carbon dioxide and methane increases, were first identified
in cores taken from polar ice caps but they appeared as only modest changes.
The changes in the Guliya core are quite substantial.
The researchers also found evidence of about 100 "abrupt climate changes"
in parts of the core representing a period 15,000 to 33,000 years ago.
During this time, the oscillations occurred about every two centuries.
The researchers measure the ratio of oxygen-18 to oxygen-16 in the ice
to determine temperature changes over time. A reduction in the proportion
of oxygen 18 molecules generally indicates a drop in atmospheric temperature.
"The isotope ratio changes seemed to indicate a temperature shift of
up to 30 degrees C," explained Keith
Henderson, a graduate fellow at the Byrd Polar Research Center. "But
we know that would be ludicrous. We
need to come up with a much better explanation for these data."
Thompson has spent the past 20 years evaluating climate history through
samples derived from stable ice sheets from the tropics and subtropics.
Polar ice caps such as those in Greenland and the Antarctic are so large
that they can control their own weather. But the much smaller non-polar
ice caps respond more directly to
changes in their climate, making them excellent research tools for
studying past climate variations of shorter
duration, he notes.
"The tropics and subtropics cover half of the Earth's surface and house
more than 75 percent of the human
population," Thompson said.
Changes in this region can have profound impacts. For years, researchers
have assumed that the climate in the tropics and sub-tropics has been fairly
stable. But thenew core from Guliya, along with their other low-latitude
ice core records, suggests that the tropics and sub-tropics may have experienced
considerable climate variability during the last 100,000 years.
Ellen Mosley-Thompson, professor of geography at Ohio State University,
said that the extreme age of the ice at the bottom of the core isn't
the most important discovery coming from the analysis. "A record of this
length from the sub-tropics is truly unprecedented," Mosley-Thompson said.
"It's good that we've got very old ice at the bottom but the age of the
ice is almost secondary to the amount of detail the core provides."
The research appears in the June 19, 1997 issue of the journal
Science.
Related information on the Internet
Guliya
Ice Cap Page
AE: Deep Ocean
Core Samples
AE: Amazon
Pollen Data
El Nino
Information
Ice
Age Paleo-ecology
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