Greetings! [ Log in ] [ Register ] [ Intranet ] [ Manage Mailing Lists Subscriptions ]
The Consortium for Ocean Leadership - Washington D.C. - (202) 232-3900
  • Home
  • About
    • From the President’s Office
    • Mission
    • History
    • Staff Directory
    • Board of Trustees
      • Scoping the Future
    • Membership
    • Visiting
    • Travel Policy
  • News & Resources
    • Events Calendar
    • Oceans of Opportunity
    • Requests for Proposals
    • Press Releases
    • Newsletters & Program Updates
    • News Archive
    • Social Media
    • Glossary of Acronyms
    • Ocean Leadership Logos and Style Guide
  • Scientific Programs
    • Census of Marine Life
    • Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative
    • The Interagency Ocean Observation Committee
    • Methane Hydrate Field Program
      • Project Science Team
      • Marine Gas Hydrate Community Workshop
      • Program Planning and Review Documents
    • National Oceanographic Partnership Program
    • Ocean Observatories Initiative
    • SCAMPI
    • Scientific Ocean Drilling
    • U.S. Science Support Program
  • Ocean Science Experts
  • Education
    • Deep Earth Academy
    • Diversity
    • Marine Geoscience Leadership Symposium
    • National Ocean Sciences Bowl
    • Ocean Sciences Educators’ Retreat (OSER)
      • Mentoring
  • Ocean Policy & Legislation
    • Ocean Leadership Policy Priorities
    • Science Funding
    • Legislative Activities Database
    • Ocean Leadership Policy Documents
    • Recent News and Upcoming Events
    • Congressional Hearings Database
    • Federal Activities
    • Ocean Leadership Events on the Hill
    • Policy 101
    • About Ocean Leadership Advocacy
    • Admiral James D. Watkins Award
  • Oceans of Opportunity

Land Bridge Caused Wild Temperature Swings

Posted on Tuesday, April 10th, 2012 at 11:00 am
SHARE THIS: 2 Shares 2 Shares ×
No flow. When the Bering Strait (box, lower left) was closed at the height of the last ice age, any sudden influx of fresh water to the North Atlantic couldn't flow through the Arctic Ocean to the North Pacific, making episodes of abrupt climate change much more likely. (Credit: NASA)

(Click to enlarge) No flow. When the Bering Strait (box, lower left) was closed at the height of the last ice age, any sudden influx of fresh water to the North Atlantic couldn't flow through the Arctic Ocean to the North Pacific, making episodes of abrupt climate change much more likely. (Credit: NASA)

Much of the last ice age was characterized by violent climate swings. At seemingly random times beginning about 80,000 years ago, average temperatures in and around the North Atlantic rose or fell by 10°C or more in the course of a decade or two—a pattern that lasted for 70,000 years.

(From ScienceNOW / by Sid Perkins) – Researchers have debated whether the climate swings were driven by sharp variations in solar activity or simply by unstable climatic processes, but a new study also points to a more earthbound culprit: the presence of a land bridge connecting Asia to North America.

Earth’s climate has been relatively stable since the end of the last ice age, says Aixue Hu, a climate scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado. And temperatures were fairly stable, too, after the ice age began in earnest about 100,000 years ago. But some 20,000 years later, things became unhinged. Around this time, Hu notes, something else happened: As the ice sheets that covered North America and northern Eurasia snatched up more and more of Earth’s water, global sea level dropped to about 50 meters lower than it is today. That exposed a broad strip of land that connected what is today Alaska and Siberia. Ancient animals used the land bridge, which measured as much as 1500 kilometers wide in spots, to roam back and forth between Asia and North America, and many researchers have proposed that early humans used the dry land as a route to the New World. But according to a new study by Hu and colleagues, there were also huge consequences for Earth’s climate.

Hu’s team ran two sets of climate simulations: one in which the Bering Strait was open, as it is today, and one in which it was blocked, separating the North Pacific from the Arctic Ocean. In each set of simulations, the researchers gradually added large amounts of fresh water to the North Atlantic between the latitudes of 20° and 50°. At the time, the researchers propose, this swath, which spans the latitudes from southern Cuba to southern England, would have received large amounts of meltwater from Northern Hemisphere ice sheets during warm spells that occasionally punctuated the ice age. Today, the surface waters in this swath affect the temperature and salinity of water even farther north in the Atlantic, a region where surface waters cool, sink to the seafloor, and then flow southward—a critical link of the worldwide conveyor belt of ocean circulation. If waters of the far North Atlantic don’t sink, says Hu, much of the large-scale ocean circulation worldwide temporarily collapses. One result: the Gulf Stream, which brings climate-warming waters from the equator to the North Atlantic, comes to a halt.

In both sets of simulations, surface waters became so fresh that they never got denser than the underlying salty water, and therefore never sank, shutting down ocean circulation and plunging areas around the North Atlantic, including Greenland, into a cold spell. However, the researchers noted a critical difference between the sets of simulations: When the Bering Strait was closed, it took as many as 1400 years for ocean circulation to recover; when the strait was open, the circulation rarely took more than 400 years to recuperate—a sign that ocean circulation is stable when the strait is open, the team reports online today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Whenever the ocean circulation shut down in the simulations, temperatures in Greenland suddenly dropped by 12°C—a decrease similar in magnitude to many abrupt cold snaps chronicled in the Greenland ice core records. But in the future, such shifts are unlikely to occur, because now—and in the future, as sea levels are predicted to rise from current levels—the Bering Strait will remain open.

“This is a very nice study, and their results make a lot of sense,” says Ronald Stouffer, a climate modeler with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory in Princeton, New Jersey. The team’s results “are a really important contribution,” adds Lloyd Keigwin, a paleoceanographer at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) in Massachusetts. In 2007, Keigwin and Mea Cook, a geoscientist then at WHOI, proposed that ocean circulation through the Bering Strait helps stabilize climate in the North Atlantic. “This is good supporting evidence for the model we proposed a few years ago,” he says.

SHARE THIS: 2 Shares Facebook 0 Twitter 2 Tweet Google+ 0 StumbleUpon 0 Pin It Share 0 Land Bridge Caused Wild Temperature Swings PinExt photo Reddit 0 LinkedIn 0 Email -- Email to a friend 2 Shares ×

See Also: Climate Change | Ice Age

You May Also Enjoy These Stories:

  • Ice Age Bowhead Whales’ Survival Surprises Scientists
  • Corals ‘Could Survive a More Acidic Ocean’
  • New Study Lowers Estimate Of Ancient Sea-Level Rise: 20 To 43 Feet
  • Engineering Oceans To Suck Up Carbon Has Eco Consequences
  • Study: Gray Whales Likely Survived The Ice Ages By Changing Their Diets, ‘Employing Generalist Filter-Feeding Mode’

Become an Ocean Leader

Facebook Twitter Google+ RSS

Subscribe to Ocean News Weekly

Upcoming Events

  • June 4, 2013:
    • Save The Date: Capitol Hill Ocean Week (all day)
  • June 24, 2013:
    • 2013 AGU Science Policy Conference: Preparing for Our Future (all day)
  • September 23, 2013:
    • OCEANS 2013 MTS/IEEE San Diego (all day)

What's Hot This Month

  • Oceans Awash: 5 Wins and 5 Losses in 2010Oceans Awash: 5 Wins and 5 Losses in 2010 : President Obama issued an executive order in July to implement conservation-based management of our public seas -- based on marine spatial planning, or what former Coast Guard Commandant Thad Allen calls, "urban planning into the water column." ...

  • New NOAA Report Examines National Oil Pollution Threat from ShipwrecksNew NOAA Report Examines National Oil Pollution Threat from Shipwrecks : NOAA presented to the U.S. Coast Guard today a new report that finds that 36 sunken vessels scattered across the U.S. seafloor could pose an oil pollution threat to the nation's coastal marine resources....

  • The Ocean Offers Many LessonsThe Ocean Offers Many Lessons : Even before Darwin first speculated that life emerged from "some warm little pond," the book of Genesis said God prefaced the creation of humanity by making the "great sea creatures and every living thing that scurries and swarms in the water."...

  • Changing Wave Heights Projected As The Atmosphere Warms; ‘Considerable Uncertainty Remains’Changing Wave Heights Projected As The Atmosphere Warms; ‘Considerable Uncertainty Remains’ : Climate scientists studying the impact of changing wave behavior on the world's coastlines are reporting a likely decrease in average wave heights across 25 per cent of the global ocean....

  • Shark-Stalking Robot Will Spy on Ocean’s Deadliest PredatorsShark-Stalking Robot Will Spy on Ocean’s Deadliest Predators : This summer, a new underwater robot will start tracking some of the ocean's top predators -- including great white sharks -- to learn more about their habits....

  • Opportunity: Senior Manager, PolicyOpportunity: Senior Manager, Policy : The Consortium for Ocean Leadership is pleased to announce the search for a Senior Manager, Policy. This is a regular, full-time. exempt position....

  • As CO2 Approaches Symbolic Milestone, Scripps Launches Daily Keeling Curve UpdateAs CO2 Approaches Symbolic Milestone, Scripps Launches Daily Keeling Curve Update : Levels of the greenhouse gas are approaching 400 parts per million; Scripps offering daily Twitter feed, news and analysis of climate indicators ...

  • Amazing Sea Butterflies Are the Ocean’s Canary in the Coal MineAmazing Sea Butterflies Are the Ocean’s Canary in the Coal Mine : The chemistry of the ocean is changing. Most climate change discussion focuses on the warmth of the air, but around one-quarter of the carbon dioxide we release into the atmosphere dissolves into the ocean. ...

  • Q&A: Blinding Us From ScienceQ&A: Blinding Us From Science : Science is under attack. With corporations manufacturing uncertainty to undermine studies that hurt their bottom lines and the sequester cutting billions in funding for scientific research, you’d think the American science community would be hunkered down in t...

  • World Ocean Day: Why Do We Currently Know More About the Moon than Our Own Oceans?World Ocean Day: Why Do We Currently Know More About the Moon than Our Own Oceans? : How much do we know about life in the ocean? A lot, you might say. But how much do we really know about life in the ocean? A lot less than you might think, I say....

Recent Posts

  • New NOAA Report Examines National Oil Pollution Threat from Shipwrecks
  • Q&A: Blinding Us From Science
  • Bob Gagosian – From the President’s Office: 5-16-2013
  • Lowering Ocean Temperatures Helps Save Coral Reefs
  • Amazing Sea Butterflies Are the Ocean’s Canary in the Coal Mine

RSS JOIDES Resolution Blog

  • Hurdling Obstacles is the name of the game
  • Day 5: Science Better than Reality TV
  • My first "aha" moment.
  • The story continues
  • A napkin was the key to the invention of the CORK

RSS ScienceDaily

  • Pinpointing how nature's benefits link to human well-being
  • Thinking 'big' may not be best approach to saving large-river fish
  • Top 10 new species of 2012
  • More emphasis needed on recycling and reuse of Li-ion batteries
  • Small, speedy plant-eater extends knowledge of dinosaur ecosystems
QR Code Business Card Web design by Will Ramos | © Copyright Consortium for Ocean Leadership 2013. All Rights Reserved. | 149 queries in 1.116 seconds.