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1、Evidence of Climate Change in Glacier Ice and Sea IceJohn J. KelleyInstitute of Marine ScienceSchool of Fisheries and Ocean SciencesUniversity of Alaska FairbanksEvidence for warming of the Arctic Recent studies using a variety of methods and sources of information (sonar, remote sensing) indicate t

2、hat sea ice in the northern hemisphere has decreased by about 7% to 14% over the past 40 years. The floating ice has also become about 40% thinner over the same period.Evidence for warming of the Arctic The Greenland Ice Sheet is losing about two cubic miles of ice each year to the sea. Alaska is al

3、so losing an impressive amount of fresh water to the worlds oceans. Example: the Harding Ice Field has shrunk enough over the past 40 years to raise the Earths sea level by 0.1 mm.Evidence for warming of the Arctic Computer models suggest that melting is too severe to be created by natural causes al

4、one and is probably related to human activity. Fresh melt water from the Arctic might slow the conveyor by diluting salty waters of the North, thus setting the stage for global cooling such as happened 15,000 and 12,000 years ago.Is the climate changing? There have been very large changes in the mor

5、e distant past. The last million years have seen a succession of major ice ages interspersed with warmer periods. The last of these ice ages began to come to an end about 20,000 years ago. We are now in what is called an interglacial period.A view to the past:Decade-to-century scale climate variabil

6、ity Volcanic aerosols Solar variability Greenhouse gasses Atmosphere/ocean dynamicsReasons for scientific uncertainty Sources and sinks of greenhouse gases (e.g., CO2, CH4, N2O, CFC), which affect predictions of future concentrations; clouds, which strongly influence the magnitude of climate change;

7、 oceans, which influence the timing and patterns of climate change; polar ice sheets, which affect predictions of sea level rise.The complexity of the system means that wecannot rule out surprisesIncomplete understanding of:Why Greenland? GISP Thickest ice in North America Sustained through intergla

8、cial period Simple flow High accumulation: about 20 cm/yr. Almost no melting Broad plateau Basal ice is below pressure melting point (e.g., -2.4C at 3,100 m) Mean annual temperature of -31CGISP II ice coring drill located on Greenland ice cap. Acquired a core 3050m to bedrock including a section of

9、basal rock (granite).PICO/UAF 198994Loading cargoGreenlandRock drillGISP2, Greenland5.2” Coring HeadGreenlandCutting silty ice into 2 m. pieces1st pebble in clear ice at 3040 m depth1st silty ice core backlit to show detailSilty ice at 3043 m. visible layeringSilty ice in relaxation trenchVolcanic r

10、ecords in ice cores1.Establish time lines in the ice corea)Absolute agesb)Correlation tool2.Evaluate atmospheric effects of past volcanic activitya)Climateb)Ozonec)ENSOd)Determining factors1)Importance of type of eruptiona)Compositionb)Eruption height2)Importance of location of volcanoVolcanic recor

11、ds in ice cores3.Modify the existing paleovolcanic record primarily for equatorial and northern hemisphere volcanoesa)Incompleteness of geologic recordb)Minor nature of more recent eruptions4.Determine changes in paleocirculation patterns (in general)a)Prevalence of volcanic signals from certain reg

12、ionsVolcanic signals in ice cores1.ECM recorda)High ECM spikes = high H2SO42.Chemical signala)High SO4, Cl, NO3 (possible)3.Microparticlesa)High conentrationb)High mass4.Tephra in ice corea)SEM and electron microprobeb)Comparison of chemical composition with that of eruptionEffects of great volcanic

13、 eruptions in ice coreDepthVolcanic eruption and age32.11Katmai, Alaska, 1912 AD; Excellent match, volcanic glass41.5741.66Krakatau, Sumatra/Java, 1883 AD; Two different ash compositions. A second eruption?70.9571.45Laki, Iceland and Asame, Japan, 1783 AD; Ash and glass86.7586.97Several possible eru

14、ptions, 1720s; Two distinct groups of ash possibily from Japan or Iceland101.2101.3Tarumai, Japan, 1667 AD; Phytolitic composition ash116.22117.31Nevada del Ruiz, Columbia, 1595 AD; Dalcitic glass147.3Mt. St. Helens, USA, 1479 AD; Excellent match, ash174.6Oraefajakull, Iceland, 1362 AD; Very good ma

15、tch, rhyolitic ash199.66200.06Unknown, 1259 AD; Possibly El ChichonMulti-parameter view of the period 1018 kyr B.P.Isotope profile of GRIP coreOxygen isotope profileAtmosphere during the Younger DryasArctic Ocean drift stationsSea ice concentrationsDecadal trendsIce draft, 195076 & 199397Sea ice

16、 extentThe variability in both the Hadley Centre and GFDL models is in very good agreement and almost equal to the observed magnitude of decrease in northern hemisphere sea ice. Both models predict continued substantial sea ice extent and thickness decreases in the next century.Some results relating

17、 to climateCalcium and microparticle concentrations are a measure of atmospheric dust concentration. They were more than ten times larger during the last glaciation.18O/16O or 2H/1H is the main proxy for temperature at the time of the corresponding snow fall. This air becomes entrained in the ice.Th

18、e transition from the last glaciation to the post-glacial epoch appears to be a fast increase about 14,000 years ago.Some results relating to climateAfter about 1,000 years, the temperature started to decrease again and reached cold glacial values again about 12,500 years ago (5 to 12C colder than p

19、resent). The return to the cold phase is known as the Younger Dryas and lasted on the order of 1,000 years.About 11,700 years ago the temperature abruptly increased again by about 6 C.Some results relating to climateThe last interglacial period lasted from about 135,000 to about 115,000 years before present. It is located in the core from Greenland between 2,780 and 2,870 m below the surface. The stable isotope record indicates drastic climate variations. Temperatures were on the order of 2C warmer than today

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