Cambiamenti Climatici
Transcript
Cambiamenti Climatici
Climate of the last 100 My or more 2009 GEOLOGIC TIME SCALE MESOZOIC lunedì 12 marzo 2012 20 5E C5E 6 C6 11.6 SERRAVALLIAN M 16.0 E 20.4 23.0 10 C10 30 11 12 13 35 C11 C12 C13 OLIGOCENE C9 L E L 23 150 C21 C22 C23 M E 180 190 LUTETIAN 48.6 24 C25 26 C26 60 27 28 65 29 C27 C28 C29 30 C30 PALEOCENE 55 55.8 L THANETIAN 58.7 M 230 SELANDIAN 61.7 E 220 240 DANIAN 65.5 250 83.5 85.8 89.3 280 93.5 99.6 300 320 APTIAN EARLY 125 BARREMIAN VALANGINIAN BERRIASIAN TITHONIAN M22 LATE KIMMERIDGIAN OXFORDIAN MIDDLE CALLOVIAN BATHONIAN BAJOCIAN AALENIAN 340 130 136 140 360 380 156 161 165 400 420 183 EARLY SINEMURIAN HETTANGIAN 190 440 197 201.6 460 204 480 LATE NORIAN 500 228 CARNIAN MIDDLE LADINIAN ANISIAN EARLY OLENEKIAN INDUAN 235 520 241 245 250 251.0 WORDIAN ROADIAN KUNGURIAN E PENNSYLVANIAN SAKMARIAN ASSELIAN GZELIAN KASIMOVIAN MOSCOVIAN BASHKIRIAN SERPUKHOVIAN MISSISSIPPIAN EON ERA 251 254 PERIOD 260 266 268 271 276 284 297 299.0 304 306 312 TOURNAISIAN L GIVETIAN EIFELIAN EMSIAN PRAGHIAN 540 L M E PRIDOLIAN LUDFORDIAN GORSTIAN HOMERIAN SHEINWOODIAN TELYCHIAN AERONIAN RHUDDANIAN HIRNANTIAN L KATIAN SANDBIAN M DARRIWILIAN DAPINGIAN FLOIAN E Furongian Series 3 Series 2 Terreneuvian TREMADOCIAN STAGE 10 STAGE 9 PAIBIAN GUZHANGIAN DRUMIAN STAGE 5 STAGE 4 STAGE 3 STAGE 2 FORTUNIAN 398 407 411 416 419 421 423 426 428 436 439 444 446 1250 1500 1750 1000 1200 MESOPROTEROZOIC 488 492 496 501 503 507 510 517 521 535 542 ECTASIAN 1400 CALYMMIAN 1600 STATHERIAN 1800 OROSIRIAN PALEOPROTEROZOIC 2050 RHYACIAN 2250 2300 SIDERIAN 2500 2500 NEOARCHEAN 2750 2800 3000 468 472 479 850 STENIAN 2000 455 461 CRYOGENIAN 1000 385 392 542 TONIAN 345 374 NEOPROTEROZOIC 750 318 326 BDY. AGES (Ma) 630 FAMENNIAN FRASNIAN M EDIACARAN VISEAN LOCKHOVIAN TOARCIAN PLIENSBACHIAN CAPITANIAN ARTINSKIAN E 168 172 176 M CHANGHSINGIAN WUCHIAPINGIAN 359 145.5 151 PERMIAN L 260 112 RHAETIAN 210 YPRESIAN 70.6 ALBIAN 200 C24 25 TURONIAN CENOMANIAN M12 M14 M16 M18 M20 M29 170 SANTONIAN CONIACIAN HAUTERIVIAN 160 PRIABONIAN 40.4 EOCENE C20 M0r M1 M3 M5 M25 37.2 PALEOGENE 22 130 BARTONIAN 45 21 120 140 RUPELIAN C17 19 C19 50 CHATTIAN C18 20 110 28.4 18 40 34 C34 LATE AGE (Ma) 65.5 CAMPANIAN M10 33.9 15 C15 16 C16 17 100 AQUITANIAN 6B C6B 9 13.8 LANGHIAN 6C C6C 7 C7 7A C7A 8 C8 90 BURDIGALIAN 6A C6A 25 C33 80 PICKS (Ma) PROTEROZOIC 5C C5C 5D C5D 32 C32 33 7.2 TORTONIAN MAASTRICHTIAN AGE PRECAMBRIAN 3250 3500 ARCHEAN 5B C5B 30 C30 31 C31 AGE PERIOD EPOCH (Ma) CARBONIFEROUS C5A L 5.3 70 PICKS (Ma) DEVONIAN 15 C5 0.01 1.8 2.6 3.6 AGE PALEOZOIC ORDOVICIAN SILURIAN 5A C4A MIOCENE 5 C4 NEOGENE 4A 10 ZANCLEAN MESSINIAN 3A C3A 4 GELASIAN PIACENZIAN CRETACEOUS PLIOCENE C3 TERTIARY Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche 5 3 CALABRIAN PERIOD EPOCH JURASSIC 2A C2A HOLOCENE AGE (Ma) CHRON. PLEISTOCENE PICKS (Ma) HIST. QUATERNARY AGE TRIASSIC C1 C2 EPOCH RAPID POLARITY CHANGES 1 2 PERIOD ANOM. CHRON. HIST. ANOM. AGE (Ma) MAGNETIC POLARITY CAMBRIAN* CENOZOIC MAGNETIC POLARITY MESOARCHEAN 3200 PALEOARCHEAN 3600 3750 EOARCHEAN 3850 HADEAN *International ages have not been fully established. These are current names as reported by the International Commission on Stratigraphy. Walker, J.D., and Geissman, J.W., compilers, 2009, Geologic Time Scale: Geological Society of America, doi: 10.1130/2009.CTS004R2C. ©2009 The Geological Society of America. Sources for nomenclature and ages are primarily from Gradstein, F., Ogg, J., Smith, A., et al., 2004, A Geologic Time Scale 2004: Cambridge University Press, 589 p. Modifications to the Triassic after: Furin, S., Preto, N., Rigo, M., Roghi, G., Gianolla, P., Crowley, J.L., and Bowring, S.A., 2006, High-precision U-Pb zircon age from the Triassic of Italy: Implications for the Triassic time scale and the Carnian origin of calcareous nannoplankton and dinosaurs: Geology, v. 34, p. 1009–1012, doi: 10.1130/G22967A.1; and Kent, D.V., and Olsen, P.E., 2008, Early Jurassic magnetostratigraphy and paleolatitudes from the Hartford continental rift basin (eastern North America): Testing for polarity bias and abrupt polar wander in association with the central Atlantic magmatic province: Journal of Geophysical Research, v. 113, B06105, doi: 10.1029/2007JB005407. Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche Climate of the last 100 My or more lunedì 12 marzo 2012 Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche Climate of the last 100 My or more lunedì 12 marzo 2012 Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche Climate of the last 100 My or more lunedì 12 marzo 2012 Infact the energetic ditribution and velocity of circulation systems are related to the geography and oceans-continents configuration. Changes on the circulation systems will produce changes in the energy distribution, that is strongly related to the climat. Climate of the last 100 My or more Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche Plate tectonics change the oceans-atmosphere-continents relationships lunedì 12 marzo 2012 Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche Climate of the last 100 My or more lunedì 12 marzo 2012 Climate of the last 100 My or more Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche Bärbel Hönisch, et al. Science 335, 1058 (2012) lunedì 12 marzo 2012 Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche Climate of the last 60 My lunedì 12 marzo 2012 Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche Hominids of the last 10 My lunedì 12 marzo 2012 Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche Climate of the last 5 My This figure shows the climate record of Lisiecki and Raymo (2005) constructed by combining measurements from 57 globally distributed deep sea sediment cores. The measured quantity is oxygen isotope fractionation ([[δ18O]]) in benthic foraminifera, which serves as a proxy for the total global mass of glacial ice sheets. Lisiecki and Raymo constructed this record by first applying a computer aided process of adjusting individual "wiggles" in each sediment core to have the same alignment (i.e. wiggle matching). Then the resulting stacked record is orbitally tuned by adjusting the positions of peaks and valleys to fall at times consistent with an orbitally driven ice model (see Milankovitch cycles). Both sets of these adjustments are constrained to be within known uncertainties on sedimentation rates and consistent with independently dated tie points (if any). Constructions of this kind are common. However, they assume that ice volume is driven by changes in insolation, and such data therefore cannot be used to establish the existence of such a relationship. lunedì 12 marzo 2012 Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche Climate of the last 5 My lunedì 12 marzo 2012 Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche Climate of the last 800 Ky or more lunedì 12 marzo 2012 CO2 and CH4 concentrations follow temperature (more on this in later lectures) Temperature cycles of 8-10°C Glacials and interglacials Slow (~ few kyear) transitions Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche Sea level change 100 My lunedì 12 marzo 2012 Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche Sea level of last 900 ky lunedì 12 marzo 2012 Sea level records back up other climate proxies At glacial maximum, sea level was about 130 m below current Climate of the last 250 ky Comparison of various global and Arctic proxy records spanning the past 250,000 years. Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche Approximate durations of interglacial MIS are indicated by yellow bars. (A) June insolation values in W/m2 for 65°N. (B) Greenland ice core (North Greenland Ice Core Project) δ18O values expressed as ‰ in relation to Vienna standard mean ocean water. (C) Global stacked benthic δ18O values. (D) The red dashed line indicate the number of planktic foraminifera per gram of sediment in the GreenICE core. (E) Ice-rafted debris from the GreenICE core off the coast of Greenland/Ellesmere Island measured as the weight percentage of the sediment fraction >63 μm. (F) the black line indicates relative % herb pollen (Lake E). (G) gray lines indicate relative % tree and shrub pollen. (H) Total organic carbon. (I) Magnetic susceptibility as a proxy for seasonal lake ice cover. lunedì 12 marzo 2012 Brigham-Grette J PNAS 2009;106:18431-18432 Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche Climate frequencies last 2 My lunedì 12 marzo 2012 • Power spectra from ocean sediment cores • Peaks correspond to Earthʼs orbital variations Orbital Theory Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche Serbian mathematician Milutin Milankovitch proposed in 1920 that variations in Earthʼs orbit would influence climate lunedì 12 marzo 2012 Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche Orbital Theory Eccentricity 96-100 kyr period lunedì 12 marzo 2012 Obliquity 41kyr period Precession 19-21kyr period Orbital Theory Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche Distance from the Earth to the sun is different at opposite sides of the orbit (i.e. 6 months apart) lunedì 12 marzo 2012 Eccentricity changes cyclically with a period of about 96,000 years. Eccentricity varies between about 0 and 0.07 (the orbit stretched by 7% away from a circle) Earth receives the same total radiation from the sun regardless of eccentricity, but the amount received can be different for the two hemispheres Circular orbit: annual radiation received by each hemisphere is the same Eccentricity = 0.07: difference in solar radiation up to 28% between the two hemispheres Currently: eccentricity is 0.0174: Southern hemisphere receives 6.7% more radiation in a year Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche Orbital Theory lunedì 12 marzo 2012 • Earth's axis of rotation is tilted relative to the orbital plane • Currently the tilt (obliquity) is 23.5° • Tilt varies between about 21.5° and 24.5° with a period of about 41,000 years • Large obliquity: seasons more exaggerated • Change in the strength of the seasons can affect the entire climate system Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche Orbital Theory • The Pole Star (Polaris) is currently 44 minutes of arc (three-quarters of one degree) away from the Earth's axis. Taking a time-lapse photograph of the northern night sky will reveal all the stars rotating around Polaris, regardless of the time of year. • Because of the 41,000 year wobble in the angle of obliquity, there has not always been a Pole Star. Ancient Greek texts from Hipparchus (125 BC) state 'at the Pole there is no star at all!'. • Shakespeare was wrong when he said in 1599 that Julius Caesar is 'as constant as the Northern Star'. There was no Northern Star. • Why does the obliquity vary only by a very small amount? If the obliquity were 90o then the North Pole could point at the sun throughout a whole year while the South Pole would be in perpetual darkness. This doesn't happen because of the influence of the moon on the Earth's orbit. Without a moon the Earth's obliquity would wobble chaotically, leading to dramatic variations in climate. Perhaps without our moon no life would ever have evolved on Earth. lunedì 12 marzo 2012 Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche Climate of the last 100 My or more lunedì 12 marzo 2012 • The direction of the long axis of the ellipse rotates slowly • Influences which hemisphere has its summer when Earth is closest to the Sun • The period of precession of the Earth's orbit is complicated by other planets (mainly Jupiter); it is between Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche Radiatiation effect lunedì 12 marzo 2012 Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche Sola radiation and orbital variations lunedì 12 marzo 2012 Calculated annual mean solar radiation received by NH mid latitudes (65°N) by including all orbital variations Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche Other cyclicities? • Evidence for large amplitude ʻcyclesʼ (DansgaardOeschger) with periods less than 10 kyears • Some evidence that T increased before expected by orbital changes lunedì 12 marzo 2012 Greenland ice core record of oxygen isotope ratio Power spectrum for Greenland ice core with dominant periods (in years) marked at the top Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche Climate fluctuations during Glacials • Heinrich iceberg events – Peaks of ice-rafted debris in marine sediments (7-10 kyear timescale) • Dansgaard-Oeschger ʻcyclesʼ – Peaks in the Oxygen isotope from Greenland cores lunedì 12 marzo 2012 Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche Bipolar seesaw lunedì 12 marzo 2012 Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche Bipolar seesaw - last transition • De-glaciation period halted by 2000 year glacial period (Younger Dryas) • Antarctic cold reversal preceded Younger Dryas by >1000 years • Present interglacial much more stable than glacial period • Evidence for significant, rapid regional climate fluctuations in present interglacial (much current research on this critical issue) lunedì 12 marzo 2012 Climate of the last 11 ky - Holocene • The Holocene is more relevant to our current climate than the glacial period Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche • An abrupt event in the early Holocene (8.2 kyear BP) – European annual mean T dropped 2°C – Significant decrease in N. Atlantic SST – Possibly world-wide (New Zealand glaciers) • Further events documented from pollen and lake level records in Europe, N America, Australia lunedì 12 marzo 2012 Summary • The magnitude of the Northern Hemisphere warming over the 20th century is likely to have been the largest of any century in the last 1000 years Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche • Warming of last 3 decades has been globally synchronous – But the record is limited earlier than 1000 years BP • The last 1000 years are dominated by the Little Ice Age and the Medieval Warm Period – These were likely not globally synchronous phenomena – Controversy about the magnitude and causes of these events • Large and rapid non globally synchronous decadal temperature changes occurred during the last Ice Age (10-100 kyears BP) – Particularly in NH regions – 5-10°C changes per decade locally • Less pronounced, almost globally synchronous temperature changes also occurred • Evidence for significant, rapid regional temperature changes in the present 10 kyear interglacial (Holocene) – No evidence for globally synchronous events lunedì 12 marzo 2012 Cambiamenti Climatici - Basi scientifiche Is the recent warming unusual? • Our current understanding of past climates suggests that the current warming, particularly in the last 30 years, is distinguished by being globally synchronous • Although current global mean temperatures are likely the highest of the last 1000 years, there is no evidence that this is unusual, considering the gaps in our understanding of what controls climate fluctuations (the early Holocene was warmer than at present) • The rate of change of temperature is lower now than in some deglaciation periods. Further natural or human-induced abrupt regional climate changes cannot be ruled out. • There is much to learn about natural climate variability lunedì 12 marzo 2012
Documenti analoghi
Carbon reservoirs • Geologic carbon • Carbon - e
• Observations of other stars suggests that our Sun was 20-30%
weaker 3 billion years ago
• This would imply a surface T on Earth about 20 oC colder than today
• Presence of water (known from geolo...