Study: Did early climate impact divert a new glacial age?

December 17, 2008

The common wisdom is that the invention of the steam engine and the advent of the coal-fueled industrial age marked the beginning of human influence on global climate.

But gathering physical evidence, backed by powerful simulations on the world's most advanced computer climate models, is reshaping that view and lending strong support to the radical idea that human-induced climate change began not 200 years ago, but thousands of years ago with the onset of large-scale agriculture in Asia and extensive deforestation in Europe.

What's more, according to the same computer simulations, the cumulative effect of thousands of years of human influence on climate is preventing the world from entering a new glacial age, altering a clockwork rhythm of periodic cooling of the planet that extends back more than a million years.

"This challenges the paradigm that things began changing with the Industrial Revolution," says Stephen Vavrus, a climatologist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison's Center for Climatic Research and the Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies. "If you think about even a small rate of increase over a long period of time, it becomes important."

Addressing scientists here today (Dec. 17) at a meeting of the American Geophysical Union, Vavrus and colleagues John Kutzbach and Gwenaëlle Philippon provided detailed evidence in support of a controversial idea first put forward by climatologist William F. Ruddiman of the University of Virginia. That idea, debated for the past several years by climate scientists, holds that the introduction of large-scale rice agriculture in Asia, coupled with extensive deforestation in Europe began to alter world climate by pumping significant amounts of greenhouse gases — methane from terraced rice paddies and carbon dioxide from burning forests — into the atmosphere. In turn, a warmer atmosphere heated the oceans making them much less efficient storehouses of carbon dioxide and reinforcing global warming.

That one-two punch, say Kutzbach and Vavrus, was enough to set human-induced climate change in motion.

"No one disputes the large rate of increase in greenhouse gases with the Industrial Revolution," Kutzbach notes. "The large-scale burning of coal for industry has swamped everything else" in the record.

But looking farther back in time, using climatic archives such as 850,000-year-old ice core records from Antarctica, scientists are teasing out evidence of past greenhouse gases in the form of fossil air trapped in the ice. That ancient air, say Vavrus and Kutzbach, contains the unmistakable signature of increased levels of atmospheric methane and carbon dioxide beginning thousands of years before the industrial age.

"Between 5,000 and 8,000 years ago, both methane and carbon dioxide started an upward trend, unlike during previous interglacial periods," explains Kutzbach. Indeed, Ruddiman has shown that during the latter stages of six previous interglacials, greenhouse gases trended downward, not upward. Thus, the accumulation of greenhouse gases over the past few thousands of years, the Wisconsin-Virginia team argue, is very likely forestalling the onset of a new glacial cycle, such as have occurred at regular 100,000-year intervals during the last million years. Each glacial period has been paced by regular and predictable changes in the orbit of the Earth known as Milankovitch cycles, a mechanism thought to kick start glacial cycles.

"We're at a very favorable state right now for increased glaciation," says Kutzbach. "Nature is favoring it at this time in orbital cycles, and if humans weren't in the picture it would probably be happening today."

Importantly, the new research underscores the key role of greenhouse gases in influencing Earth's climate. Whereas decreasing greenhouse gases in the past helped initiate glaciations, the early agricultural and recent industrial increases in greenhouse gases may be forestalling them, say Kutzbach and Vavrus.

Using three different climate models and removing the amount of greenhouse gases humans have injected into the atmosphere during the past 5,000 to 8,000 years, Vavrus and Kutzbach observed more permanent snow and ice cover in regions of Canada, Siberia, Greenland and the Rocky Mountains, all known to be seed regions for glaciers from previous ice ages. Vavrus notes: "With every feedback we've included, it seems to support the hypothesis (of a forestalled ice age) even more. We keep getting the same answer."

Source: University of Wisconsin-Madison


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  • GrayMouser - Dec 17, 2008
    • Rank: 3 / 5 (6)
    Try http://canadafree...cle/6855

    Apparently CO2 levels were measured to be higher than today during the 1800s.

    Also, greenhouse gases have been shown to trail increases in global temperature so why would anyone suppose that their decrease would cause a decrease in global temperatures?
  • MikeB - Dec 17, 2008
    • Rank: 2.6 / 5 (5)
    If industrialization has done this since 1959:

    http://i224.photo...2000.gif

    We must have started out at a negative number 5,000 to 8,000 years ago.
  • barakn - Dec 17, 2008
    • Rank: 1 / 5 (3)
    Are you serious, GrayMouser? The first graph your link leads to shows that early attempts to measure CO2 were not very well done. The fact that there are a large number of data points clustered around 250-300 ppm and then scattered points above 300 ppm is very telling. The scattered points were performed by experimentalists that did not do an adequate job of filtering out local sources of CO2, e.g. local factories or even their own breath or the Bunsen burners in the lab. That is why it was necessary to start taking CO2 measurements from the top of a very tall volcano in the middle of the largest ocean. Or would you have us believe that somehow CO2 varied wildly, somehow never dropping below the 250 ppm floor, and then suddenly behaved linearly just at the moment Keeling started measuring? The speculation on contamination of the ice bubble CO2 measurements is also amusing, as most of the proposed contamination should have led to higher CO2 readings, and yet the ice bubble CO2 measurements are consistently lower than the early (botched) atmospheric measurements.
  • Velanarris - Dec 18, 2008
    • Rank: 5 / 5 (1)
    So this study really is in existance to try to offset the "roman/medieval warm period" theories that show zero link to the much abused CO2 warming method.

    Wait a minute, this article is a massive massive misquotation. Go to google books and look up Kutsbach's works. Read some of the excerpts.
  • GrayMouser - Dec 18, 2008
    • Rank: 5 / 5 (2)
    Are you serious, GrayMouser? The first graph your link leads to shows that early attempts to measure CO2 were not very well done. The fact that there are a large number of data points clustered around 250-300 ppm and then scattered points above 300 ppm is very telling.


    You don't have proof of that. They may have been very well done. It goes without saying that these are local readings.

    That is why it was necessary to start taking CO2 measurements from the top of a very tall volcano in the middle of the largest ocean. Or would you have us believe that somehow CO2 varied wildly, somehow never dropping below the 250 ppm floor, and then suddenly behaved linearly just at the moment Keeling started measuring?

    That is the question, isn't it?

    The speculation on contamination of the ice bubble CO2 measurements is also amusing, as most of the proposed contamination should have led to higher CO2 readings, and yet the ice bubble CO2 measurements are consistently lower than the early (botched) atmospheric measurements.

    Ice cores are known to vary. Without a standard to calibrate against they become farther and farther from the actual concentrations. One climatologist proposed that they could be 50% below the ambient CO2 levels.

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