1 / 15

Observing Climate - Proxy Data

Observing Climate - Proxy Data. Science Concepts Pollen analysis. Paleo Proxy Data (Con’t) Stable Isotope Analysis Palynology Midden Analysis Sedimentary Analysis. The Earth System (Kump, Kastin & Crane) • Chap. 15 (p. 292). The Earth System (Kump, Kastin & Crane)

axelle
Télécharger la présentation

Observing Climate - Proxy Data

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Observing Climate - Proxy Data Science Concepts Pollen analysis Paleo Proxy Data (Con’t) Stable Isotope Analysis Palynology Midden Analysis Sedimentary Analysis The Earth System (Kump, Kastin & Crane) • Chap. 15 (p. 292) The Earth System (Kump, Kastin & Crane) • Chap. 15 (p. 292)

  2. Observing Climate - Proxy Data Stable Isotope Analysis • 16O and 18O Isotope Analysis - Oxygen isotope ratio (18O) is a measure of the ratio of heavy oxygen (18O) to light oxygen (16O) - Used as a proxy measure for paleotemperature - More negative values indicate “colder” temperatures • 12C/13C and 15N/14N Isotope Analysis - “You are what you eat”, thus the building blocks that make your body, have been taken from foods you have eaten over your lifetime. - Specifically, the elements C and N in your bone are the same C and N atoms that were in the foods you ate. - Again we can measure the ratio of C isotopes and N isotopes to create 13C and 15N values similar to the 18O ratio above http://www.staff.brad.ac.uk/ mprichar/PRGIntrotoIsotopes.html

  3. Observing Climate - Proxy Data Stable Isotope Analysis (Con’t) • 12C/13C and 15N/14N Isotope Analysis (Con’t) - 13C and 15N values of various foods are fairly well known - 13C and 15N values are signatures specific to different types of foods, - Measuring the 13C and 15N values of your bone, we can infer from what foods the bone C and N came - Why bone - its is best preserved over time - Analysis of the extracted protein portion of the bone, collagen, (and for radiocarbon dating) reflect the protein part of our diets - Adult collagen in our bones is constantly being replaced and completely turned-over in about 10 years

  4. Observing Climate - Proxy Data Stable Isotope Analysis (Con’t) • 12C/13C and 15N/14N Isotope Analysis (Con’t) - 13C indicates how much marine protein (e.g., fish, shellfish) was in the diet, compared to terrestrial proteins (e.g., grains, breads, cattle meat and milk) - 15N indicates how much plant food was in the diet, compared to animal foods (like meat and milk) - Typical collagen isotope values Holocene Western Europe > 13C distinguishes between terrestrial (-20%) and marine (-12%) ecosystems > 15N of terrestrial herbivores are approximately 5%, terrestrial carnivores are at about 9% > For omnivores like humans the 15N indicates if they are behaving more like herbivores (plant protein) or carnivores (animal protein) http://www.staff.brad.ac.uk/mprichar/ PRGIntrotoIsotopes.html Terrestrial Ecosystems fish 15N carnivore shellfish herbivore Marine Ecosystems 13C

  5. Observing Climate - Proxy Data http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/paleo/slides/ slideset/15/15_292_slide.html Stable Isotope Analysis (Con’t) • Example - Ice Core Analysis - 18O (green line) and glacial ice accumulation (blue line) for 10,000- 17,400 y B.P. > Colder climate associated with lower accumulation values > Note how quickly the climate shifted from cold to warm phases during the glacial-interglacial transition > Research suggests that major climatic changes such as these may have occurred over just a few years, i.e., climate during the last glacial period was inherently unstable and subject to rapid fluctuations > The last 10,000 years have been the most consistent and stable climate in the 200,000 Greenland ice record > This same period appears to have been less stable at lower latitudes Periods of Rapid Change Accumulation (m ice / year) 18O Years Before Present

  6. Observing Climate - Proxy Data http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/paleo/slides/ slideset/20/20_409_slide.html Stable Isotope Analysis (Con’t) • Example - Ice Core Analysis (Con’t) - Quelccaya ice cap (5,670 m altitude; 164 m thick) provides clues about South American tropical climatic variability - Note Little Ice Age is identified in the 18O between 1550 and 1900 A.D.
 http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/paleo/slides/slideset/20/20_400_slide.html

  7. Observing Climate - Proxy Data Stable Isotope Analysis (Con’t) • Example - Coral Analysis - Ambient water conditions (i.e., Sea Surface Temperature (SST) and, possibly, fresh water influx and precipitation) when a layer of coral skeletons was deposited determine the 18O within ice cores). Thus, analyses of 18O can yield information about past water conditions - Note that red spikes (high 18O anomaly) in 18O correspond to the red spikes (high SST anomaly) in SST - Yellow zones indicate El Nino/ Southern Oscillation (ENSO) warm phases - Coral records can yield information 500-800 years into the past in many tropical areas http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/paleo/slides/ slideset/13/13_240_slide.html SST Anomaly (°C) 18O Anomaly

  8. Observing Climate - Proxy Data Palynology • Pronounced pal-ih-nol-o-jee, the "a" as in "map” • “Palyn” comes from a Greek word that means “I sprinkle” that is also a cognate of the Latin word “Pollen” which means dust or fine flour. • Branch of science dealing with microscopic (5 m to about 500 m), decay- resistant remains (such as pollen and spores, living and fossil) of certain plants and animals Figs. 1-8. Examples of pollen from flowering plants. Scale bar = 10 µm. Fig. 9. Pollen from a cone-bearing plant (e.g., pine). Scale bar = 10 µm. Reference Milne, L., 1998: Forensic Palynology. Pollen and spores, Nature's Fingerprints of Plants. http://science.uniserve.edu.au/faces/milne/milne.html

  9. Observing Climate - Proxy Data Palynology (Con’t) • Lennart von Post (1916) suggested that buried sediments of fossil pollen was a precise method for determining past vegetation regimes and cycles of vegetation change - Many plants produce great quantities of pollen or spores that are dispersed by the wind - Pollen and spores have very durable outer walls that can remain preserved for thousands or even millions of years - Unique morphological features of each type of pollen and spore remains consistent within each species, yet each different species produces its own specific form - Each pollen and spore-producing plant is restricted in its distribution by environmental conditions that include moisture, temperature and soil type - Most wind-dispersed pollen and spores rarely travel very far before falling to the surface • Thus, by counting a sufficient number of fossil pollen and spores recovered from each stratum in a deposit, one could reconstruct the types and abundance of plants represented by those fossil grains http://www.scirpus.ca/cap/articles/paper29.htm

  10. Observing Climate - Proxy Data http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/paleo/slides/ slideset/16/16_307_slide.html Midden Analysis • Middens are amalgamations of plant and animal remains encased in crystallized packrat urine • First noted by military and scientific expeditions in the West as early as 1849 • During 1960s paleoecologists began to fully recognized potential for reconstructing past environmental change • Packrats or woodrats gather and accumulate plant materials typically within 100 m of their den in dry caves and crevices • Plant remains and other debris (including insect and vertebrate remains) are cemented into large masses of crystallized urine that can persevered for tens of thousands of years Bushy-tailed woodrat http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/ paleo/slides/slideset/16/ 16_308_slide.html

  11. Observing Climate - Proxy Data http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/paleo/slides/ slideset/16/16_313_slide.html Midden Analysis (Con’t) • Thus, midden materials represent the local environment when material was collected • Middens tend to be preserved in some environments better than others; arid climates good • Midden analysis locations

  12. Observing Climate - Proxy Data http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/paleo/slides/ slideset/16/16_316_slide.html Midden Analysis (Con’t) • Results for 89 Packrat Middens - Elevation zones for vegetation has shifted over the last 24,000+ years in the Grand Canyon

  13. Observing Climate - Proxy Data Midden Analysis (Con’t) • Summary - Plants have shifted upward on the Colorado Plateau from last glacial period to the present - During the last glacial period, the timber line was lower than today - Also tree species have shifted upward http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/paleo/slides/ slideset/16/16_320_slide.html

  14. Observing Climate - Proxy Data Sediment Analysis • North Atlantic oceanic sediment cores are used to understand climatic variations during and since the last ice age but not just confined to local regions of the northeastern Atlantic • Analyze cores by counting the number of both lithic (rock) and plankton shell fragments • Total number of particles fluctuate with climate changes • Analysis of long cores indicate that plankton fragments dominated (warm periods) for long stretches of time, while rock sediments (cold periods) dominated in six spikes • These sudden changes in sediments (referred to as Heinrich events; cold events) are also visible in X-rays of sediment cores as sharp transitions between dark-colored (plankton-dominated) and light-colored (lithic-dominated) segments http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Study/Paleoclimatology_SedimentCores/

  15. Observing Climate - Proxy Data http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/paleo/slides/slideset/19/19_380_slide.html Sediment Analysis • What could cause these different sediments? - Heinrich events: A significant SST drop occurs; reduces plankton fragments; extends the ice sheet onto the continental shelf; icebergs with lithic material breakoff; float off and melt depositing lithic material over ocean bottom - Non-Heinrich events: Deposited during warm periods with more plankton material and fewer icebergs to transport lithic material

More Related