Climate 302 C EXAM 2
t=
(-1/lambda ln(N/Nsubscript0))
What determines isotope fractionation?
- Temperature: colder temperature: more O18 depletion (more negative δO18) - Condensation: preferentially remove O18 (heavier isotope) - Evaporation: preferentially remove O16 (higher isotope)
A.E. Douglass
Considered the Father of Tree Ring Research. He figured out how old a tree was when it was cut by matching its ring pattern with living trees.
t(avg)=
1/lambda It is the average time each radiocarbon atom spends in a given sample until it decays is 8270 years.
Coral Chronology
1: Aragonite skeleton of massive corals often exhibit annual density banding 2: Similar to Radiometric dating with Carbon 14 To measure on a mm scale, use a dental drill (very frequent) To measure on a micrometer scale, use a e-beam or laser (less frequent)
Long-term δ18O trend in the deep ocean as measured from the calcite shells of foraminifera(Two Factors)
1: Changes in Ocean Temperature 2: Growth of ice sheets on land that are O-16 enriched
What Influence Lake Varves?
1:Summer temperature: can be used for inferences about past high latitude summer temperature changes 2: Winter Snowfall 3: Rainfall - The latter two factors can be used to estimate past drought and precipitation patterns.
Correlation Techniques
1:Tuning- consists of matching a climate proxy record to a selected target curve Matching is accomplished by changing the chronology of the record so that it correlates better with the target curve.
Tectonic Scale Climate Changes
4 PROCESSES!!!! 1. Land Ocean spatial configuration: Control where ice sheets form 2. Spread of Sea floor: volcanoes and oxidation of organic carbon in sedimentary rocks, control release of CO2 in the atmosphere 3. Chemical Weathering: Control CO2 removal process, a thermostat of the Earth's climate 4. Uplift-mountain effect: expose fragmented and fresh rock for chemical weathering
Climate Change through the Years
580-400 MY: Climate was generally coldest 255-65 MY: climate was warmest with the warmest during the mid-Cretaceous (100MY) 65-0MY: Earth's climate became colder with time
Is Coral signal biological or climatic in origin?
?????? (find answer!)
What Radioactive Decay Does
A Neutron emits an electron and becomes a proton Occurs at a predictable, constant rate
Sediment Varves
A pair of thin sedimentary layers formed annually by seasonal climatic changes. Sedimentary varved deposits can be found in lacustrine and sometimes even in marine settings. Varved sediments can be formed from biological and sedimentologic processes, both of which are often influenced by climate variations.
Radiocarbon and Organisms
All living organisms establish the same C-14/C-12 ratio as that of the atmosphere When an organism dies the C-14 isotope decays at the constant rate of 5730 according the well known decay law. As a result, the C-14/C-12 Ratio decreases, and the age of a sample can be measure by determining the Ratio.
Lacustrine Varves
Also known as lake sediments. Great in arid terrestrial regions and latitudes poleward of treeline. If these varves can be independently confirmed through radiometric dating, they can provide seasonal/interannual resolution over centuries/ millennia.
Extending the Calibration Curve
An active area of research is attempting to extend this curve farther and farther back in time. This is done NOT with tree rings, but with speleothems and varvd sediments.
Isotopes
An element with additional neutrons than it would normally have (same number of protons and electrons)
Sensitive vs. Complacent Series
An example is if you are lookng for drought stress in an area, don't go to the area that would have the most water in the area (bottom of the canyon) rather go to the place where drought would most affect a plant (steep hillside with shallow soil). Canyon = complacent Hillside = Sensitive
Ice Cores
Annual layers of snowfall in ice cores can be counted similar to tree rings. Distinct annual layers stand out because in snow that falls in SUMMER, CRYSTALS ARE LARGER AND ACIDITY HIGHER than in winter snow. Scientists now can even tell seasons apart using a laser to measure the concentration of dust particles.
Exceptions to Radiocarbon Dating Techniques
Annually Datable Archives such as tree rings, coral, and layered lake sediments
Earth during the Winter Solstice
Axis away from Sun Vertical rays on Tropic of Capricorn (23.5°S Lat) 24-hr night above Arctic Circle (66.5°N Lat) 24-hr day below Antarctic Circle (66.5°S Lat)
Earth during the Summer Solstice
Axis toward Sun Vertical rays on Tropic of Cancer (23.5°N Lat) 24-hr day above Arctic Circle (66.5°N Lat) 24-hr night below Antarctic Circle (66.5°S Lat)
Cenozoic Climate Change
BLAG hypothesis cannot explain the divergence of the curve at 15 million years
Why Does O-18 Concentration Decrease with Temperature?
Because as the temperature increases, O-16 will be evaporated first over O-18, while O-18 condenses first (O-16 is lighter). This is also called Isotope Fractionation
Organics
Biological Response to Temperature and Salinity
Speleothems
Calcium Carbonate- Cave Deposits Grows on Scale of 10's of microns/year Can get records of TENS OF THOUSANDS OF YEARS O-18 is used for paleoclimate reconstruction of monsoons O-18 of caves is a reflection of O-18 in water, and ultimately a reflection of rainfall in the region
One big reason the dinosaurs disappeared
Climate Change
Ecological Amplitude
Climate Stress is greater at species margins
Time Scales of Climate Variation
Climate Varies on all timescales ranging from sub annual to tectonic
Earth during the Fall/Spring Equinoxes
Day=Night at all points
More on Tree Rings
Dendrochronology is crossdating Tree Rings are not counted or read Crossdating should make dating errors of tree rings 0, and uses ONLY the tree rings themselves.
Notes about proxies
Direct Measurements have limited time frames Historical records are often qualitative and incomplete Geological Archives provide both indirect qualitative and quantitative data, but qualitative data varies in temporal resolution Proxies are NOT a direct measurement of climate, but rather a response to some component of the climate
Earth's Orbit over Time
Eccentricity Varies from 0 to .0605 (today it's .0167) Varies from near circle to ellipse with a period of 100,000 years Distance to Sun changes leads to insolation changes
Marine Sediments (2 types)
Foraminifera and Organics
How a Glacial Ice Sheet Forms
Force balance on an ice sheet Surface slope leads to pressure gradient Pressure gradient opposed by shear stress Ice responds be deforming = creep flow At Equilibrium at balance b/w accumulation at top and ablation at margins
Marine Sediment Varves
Found in Santa Barbera Cariaco and Orca. These are produced by seasonal variations in surface productivity. The oceanic oxygen minimum zone is ideal for preservation of annual records because the zone inhibits activity in the sediments. These preserves provide finescale laminations of seasonal sedimentation.
Model Validation Strategy
Goal: Calibrate model on a set of data, and validate the model on an independent set of data. Use the CROSS VALIDATION METHOD (also know as the leave one out method)
Uplift Weathering Hypothesis
High relief due to uplift has increased silicate weathering causing a draw down of CO2, thus cooling the climate
High Resolution Proxies (less than 100,000 years)
Instruments- 150 years Historical- 400 years Tree Rings- 500 years Ice Cores- 20,000 years Lake Sediments- 30,000 years
C-14
It is the longest lived radioactive isotope of carbon. Occurs naturally in the atmosphere at an equilibrium level of 1:10^12 relative to the most abundant Carbon 12 The Carbon 14 formed is rapidly oxidized to CO2-14 and mixes with the rest of the CO2 in the atmosphere
Example of Proxy Data
Leaves! Serrations of Leaf indicate temperature -Jagged means colder climate Leaf Waxiness is indicator of Moisture Retention
Low Resolution Proxies (More than 100,000 years)
Ocean Sediments - 25 million years Continental Sediments - 100 million years
Ice Core Gas Concentrations
Mid 18th Century: 280 ppm Early 20th Century: 300 ppm 1958: 315 ppm Now:281 ppm
Why do Monsoons occur?
Monsoon exists because land responds to solar heating more quickly than oceans.
Oxygen Isotope Thermometer. What does the O-18 concentration tell us?
More O-18 depleted ocean waters suggest more rainfall, less ice, and warmer temperature Less O-18 depleted ocean water suggests less rainfall, more ice, and colder temperature
N=
Nsubscript0 times e^(-lambda t) number of radiocarbon atoms remaining after radioactive decay at time t
Nsubscript0
Number of Radiocarbon atoms at t=0
Oxygen Isotopes
O-16 - Light Oxygen (99.8% of all oxygen) O-18 - Heavy Oxygen (.2% of all oxygen) O-18/O-16 Ratio is .0025 or 1/400 The relative amounts of these isotopes in a sample is a function of climate/environment Antarctica and Greenland have about 5% less O-18 than ocean water
Earth's Orbit Today
Orbit=elliptical; Tilt=23.5 degrees; Axis points towards north star
Position of the Continents
Originally Continents were closer together, and then slowly spread apart. Continents were at higher latitudes which allowed for more permanent ice cover. This reflected more sunlight and created a positive feedback to cause greater cooling.
Notes about climate change through the years
Over the past 550MY there have been three icehouse periods (430, 325-240, 35-0 Myr ago) Climate was warmer in past than today. Climate shifts are relatively small except when associated with continental reorganizations
Foraminifera (Two Components)
Oxygen Isotopes (in response to salinity and temperature of ocean) Replacement of Calcium with Magnesium in Skeleton - Chemical Indicator of Temperature
Principle of Uniformity
Physical and biological processes that link environmental conditions to tree growth must have been in operation in the past TREE GROWTH IS RECOGNIZABLE AND PERIODICITY DEFINABLE
Oxygen isotope ratios as a thermometer
Precipitation has a lower O-18 content than the Ocean The O-18 content of Precipitation decreases with decreasing temperature THE LESS O-18 FOUND IN THE GLACIER ICE, THE COLDER THE CLIMATE
Dating Methods: Determining the ages of our Paleoclimate Proxy Records
Primarily done via Radiocarbon Dating Techniques Establishing a Climate Record is a first order process and must be defined with highest degree of accuracy
Cross-dating
Proccess of cross-matching patterns in ring widths or other ring parameters (thickness, darkness, false rings) between trees and stands. Cross-dating must begin with ring patterns from living trees and an outside date is known.
Isotope Fractionation
Process where O-16 evaporates first and O-18 condenses first as temperature increases
BLAG hypothesis
Proposes that climate changes over the last few hundred years are mainly driven by changes in the CO2 input of the atmosphere by plate tectonic processes CHANGES IN SEAFLOOR SPREADING CONTROL DELIVERY OF CO2 Calls on the ROCK CYCLE to moderate these effects
Why use cross dating?
Provides a mean to account for ring anomalies such as missing rings and false rings. Cross dating can also provide a mean for dating DEAD WOOD
More Dating Methods
Radiometric- use of Carbon 14 and U series Incremental- Rings, Bands or Varves Correlation
Tree Remnants
Remnants are critical for extending tree-ring chronologies. Theoldest known pine tree is around 5000 years old. But using deadwood, we can get records up to 11,000 years old.
Typical O-18 Values
River - (-15%) Surface Ocean- 0 to -2% Deep Ocean - Positive 3 to 4 Ice Sheets - (-30%) in Greenland; (-55%) in Antarctica
Tectonic Scale CO2 Fluctuations
Seafloor spreading leads to increased periods of volcanic degassing of CO2 which causes warming. Higher temperature leads to INCREASED WEATHERING, which will remove CO2 from the atmosphere and reverse warming in a NEGATIVE FEEDBACK LOOP. (Slide 6 lecture 18: memorize)
What influences the tree rings?
Size Density anatomical and chemical characteristics of each growth layer can reflect environmental conditions occurring during the year of the formation.
Formation of Ice from Snow
Snowflakes gradually compress, and as this happens, become semiliquid. In a semiliquid state they are able to fill spaces more easily, and become more dense. Semiliquid crystals bond together when they touch- eventually seal as ice.. Snow is almost 90 percent air, whereas glacial ice is 20% air, and that is as bubbles.
How long have we been measuring temperature?
Started in 17th Century, but instrumental records began mid 19th century. Instrumental Records of Ocean Climate is even shorter.
Overview of reconstruction methodology
Starts with Tree Rings (PREDICTORS) and Observed Streamflow (PREDICTAND). Then one uses statistical calibration to gain a regression model, which allows you to create a reconstruction model. This Model should Validate what you observed. IF so, you can create a time series of Reconstructed Streamflow just out of Tree Rings and Observed Streamflow.
Dendroclimatology
Study of Tree Rings to provide an indirect measure of climate (and rainfall and growth of trees) High Resolution Proxy
Dendroclimatology
Study of the relationship between annual tree growth and climate. Tree rings are used to reconstruct annual, and seasonal climatic variations, up to thousands of years before human records.
Dendrochronology
Studying of Tree Rings. Can be done throughout most of the world's temperate regions, and even some tropical regions. Each tree grows one ring per year
Varved Sediments banding identification (summer and winter)
Summer- mostly biological, organic rich Winter- mostly runoff
Types of Proxy Records of Climate Change
Temperature Estimates from Ice Cores, Tree rings, Speleothems (Cave Stuff), Corals, and Marine Sediments
What determines insolation received by the Earth?
The Sun Earth distance. It will change only gradually. The spatial and temporal distribution of insolation depends on details of sun's orbit. Orbital changes are what affect the atmosphere and ocean physics, which in turn affect greenhouse gases and abledo, thus affecting climate.
Changing initial Carbon 14
The radiocarbon method assumes that C14 is constant or at least known Studies of tree rings (ring counts)have shown that C14 varies with time To address this, scientists came up with a calibration curve.
Tree Ring-Flow Relationship
The shape of the tree ring-flow relationship is generally linear, but if not, thenit is logarithmic.
Radioactive Decay
There are stable and unstable isotope nuclei Unstable Isotope Nuclei are considered RADIOACTIVE All unstable isotopes undergo RADIOACTIVE DECAY into more stable elements (Radioactive Parent Decays into Daughter atom(s))
Climate during the dinosaurs
There were NO ice caps - this meant sea level was 100-200M HIGHER. -Warmer weather leads to more intense storms and a stronger hydrologic cycle and less wind. -There will also be more plants and flowers, etc. -4-8 times more CO2 in the atmosphere (Slide 3 lecture 18-memorize)
What Are Proxy Records of Climate Change?
They are temperature estimates from ice cores, marine sediments, tree rings, speleothems, and corals
What do Lake Varves consist of?
They consist of coarse grained, light colored deposit and a finer grained, dark-colored winter deposit formed when fine sediment settles out from the water under ice cover.
Chemical Weathering
This process releases carbonic acid and ultimately adds carbon into the ocean*
Half Life
Time it takes for half of a population of a parent atom to decay into a daughter atom
Why Study Climate?
To learn about Climate Extremes, understand the effects of human activity on climate, and to determine how periodic climate change is
Principal of limiting factors
Tree growth is controlled by some limiting climatic conditions (affects all trees synchronously)
Why use tree rings as proxies?
Tree rings offer a unique paleoclimate perspective because of their ability to provide the precisely-dated, high resolution, long-term information which can be used to understand Earth's climate
Radiocarbon
Two Stable Isotopes: Carbon 12 (98.8%) and Carbon 13 (1.1%) Equilibrium exists between rate of new C-14 production in the upper atmosphere and rate of decay of C-14 in global carbon resevoir
Coral as Climate Archives
Two Types Pacific/Indian: Porites - Diploastraea Atlantic: Montastraea - Diploria - Siderastraea Coral can be used to study climate variability in the tropical surface oceans
Coral Archive Replication: Do multiple corals from the same reef record the same signal?
Yes
Core Parameters to determine the depth age relationship in an ice core
annual layering of visual stratigraphy electrical conductivity laser light scattering of dust stable isotopes major anions and cations insoluble particles Lead 210 Total Beta Activity Change in Carbon 14
concentrations from ice core records
atmospheric gas content in an ice core is a DIRECT measure of paleo-atmospheres
Radiocarbon Calculation
dN/dt= -lambdaN
t(1/2)=
ln2/lambda It is the time it takes for half the number of radiocarbon atoms in a given sample to decay is 5730 years.
Firn
porous, uncosolidated layer of snow on top of polar ice sheets. It is approximately 90 m thick at Vostok.Gas diffuses throughout and fractionate due to gravity, and temperature and concentration gradients
lambda=
radioactive decay/disintegration constant
Eccentricity
shape of the orbit: varies from being elliptical to almost circular
Obliquity
tilt of the axis of rotation Cycle of ~ 41,000 years • Varies from 22.2 to 24.5°(The current axial tilt is 23.5°) If Earth's orbit were circular, No tilt = no seasons 90° tilt = largest seasonal differences at the poles (6 mon. darkness, 6 mon. overhead sun) • Greater tilt = more intenseseasons
Precession
wobbling of the axis of rotation
Ice Cores
• Dated with volcanic ash, ice flow models • Located at high latitudes, altitudes • H2O in ice o Oxygen isotopes - temp, precipitation • Dust amounts o Global dryness, wind • Air Bubbles - Air in the Cores are a direct measurement of actual gas concentrations in bubbles trapped in the ice o Actual samples of trapped air, determine past concentrations of different gases, i.e. CO2, CH4
Change in Insolation Effects
• Precession dominates at low and middle latitudes • Tilt is more evident at higher mid-latitudes. • Eccentricity is not significant directly, but modulates the amplitude of the precession cycle. • Summer changes dominate over winter at polar latitudes.
Tree Rings
• Predominantly temperate(mid-latitudes) • Dated using radiocarbon • Thick bands during growing season, thin bands during cold/dry months • Varying widths of growth bands reflect temperature or precipitation -Stress varies growth rates
Lake Sediments
• Record terrestrial climate variations (temperature, precipitation) • Varved sediments - annual banding caused by seasonal changes in productivity, sediment input o Summer - mostly biological, organic-rich o Winter - mostly runoff • Ostracods - Oxygen isotopes of shells • Pollen/C isotopes o Changing vegetation
Corals
• Skeletons made of aragonite(CaCO3) • Dated using annual density band, U-Th, 14C • Recorders of tropical sea surface conditions: Temperature, Salinity • Oxygen Isotopes record a combination of temp and salinity • Strontium/Calcium (Sr/Ca) records mainly temperature