November 13, 2009

In like a lion

JUST months - that's how long it took for Europe to be engulfed by an ice age. The scenario, which comes straight out of Hollywood blockbuster The Day After Tomorrow, was revealed by the most precise record of the climate from palaeohistory ever generated.

Around 12,800 years ago the northern hemisphere was hit by the Younger Dryas mini ice age, or "Big Freeze". It was triggered by the slowdown of the Gulf Stream, led to the decline of the Clovis culture in North America, and lasted around 1300 years.

Until now, it was thought that the mini ice age took a decade or so to take hold, on the evidence provided by Greenland ice cores. Not so, say William Patterson of the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon, Canada, and his colleagues.

The group studied a mud core from an ancient lake, Lough Monreagh, in western Ireland. Using a scalpel they sliced off layers 0.5 to 1 millimetre thick, each representing up to three months of time. No other measurements from the period have approached this level of detail.

Carbon isotopes in each slice revealed how productive the lake was and oxygen isotopes gave a picture of temperature and rainfall. They show that at the start of the Big Freeze, temperatures plummeted and lake productivity stopped within months, or a year at most.

Full article here.

Posted by David on November 13, 2009 4:36 PM

Comments

Color me sceptical...when you are working with such tiny physical samples and looking at tinier quantities of isotopes within them, contamination is an ever-present danger, even if the contamination were only from a breath or the surrounding ambient air....
A man who tells you he can get you accurate temeperatures by this means may have an agenda or a bridge he'd like to sell.
I'm a Chemical Engineer by training.

Posted by: doug in colorado on November 19, 2009 4:53 PM
Post a comment




  Remember Me?


(For bold text to display correctly, please use <strong>, not <b>)




Google