Meanwhile NZ's kauri trees are endangered.
Kauri Dieback Disease: Help protect our kings of our forest
Kauri
dieback disease is having a devastating effect on our giants of the
forest. It is a disease that currently has no known cure and no
proven method to prevent its spread.
Ancient tree reveals cause of spike in Arctic temperature
30,000
year old kauri tree reveals atmospheric mechanism that led to
Dansgaard-Oeschger event during last glacial period
UNIVERSITY
OF NEW SOUTH WALES
12
September, 2017
A
kauri tree preserved in a New Zealand peat swamp for 30,000 years has
revealed a new mechanism that may explain how temperatures in the
Northern Hemisphere spiked several degrees centigrade in just a few
decades during the last global ice age.
Unexpectedly,
according to new research led by scientists from UNSW Sydney and
published today in Nature Communications, it looks like
the origin of this warming may lie half-a-world away, in Antarctica.
Rapid
warming spikes of this kind during glacial periods, called
Dansgaard-Oeschger events, are well known to climate researchers.
They are linked to a phenomenon known as the "bipolar seesaw",
where increasing temperatures in the Arctic happen at the same time
as cooling over the Antarctic, and vice versa.
Until
now, these divergences in temperature at the opposite ends of the
Earth were believed to have been driven by changes in the North
Atlantic, causing deep ocean currents, often referred to as the ocean
"conveyor belt", to shut down. This led to warming in the
Northern Hemisphere and cooling in the south.
But
the study, which examines a specific Dansgaard-Oeschger event that
occurred around 30,000 years ago, suggests Antarctica plays a role
too.
The
paper describes how the researchers used a detailed sequence of
radiocarbon dates from an ancient New Zealand kauri tree to precisely
align ice, marine and sediment records across a period of greatly
changing climate.
"Intriguingly,
we found that the spike in temperature preserved in the Greenland ice
core corresponded with a 400-year-long surface cooling period in the
Southern Ocean and a major retreat of Antarctic ice," said lead
author and UNSW scientist Professor Chris Turney.
"As
we looked more closely for the cause of this opposite response we
found that there were no changes to the global ocean circulation
during the Antarctic cooling event that could explain the warming in
the North Atlantic. There had to be another cause."
A
clue to what might be going on if the oceans weren't involved
appeared in lake sediments from the Atherton Tableland, Queensland.
The sediments showed a simultaneous collapse of rain-bearing trade
winds over tropical northeast Australia.
It
was a curious change, so the researchers turned to climate models to
see if these climate events might somehow be linked.
They
started by modelling the release of large volumes of freshwater into
the Southern Ocean, exactly as would happen with rapid ice retreat
around the Antarctic.
Consistent
with the data, they found that there was cooling in the Southern
Ocean but no change in the global ocean circulation.
They
also found that the freshwater pulse caused rapid warming in the
tropical Pacific. This in turn led to changes to the atmospheric
circulation that went on to trigger sharply higher temperatures over
the North Atlantic and the collapse of rain-bearing winds over
tropical Australia.
Essentially,
the model showed the formation of a 20,000 km long "atmospheric
bridge" that linked melting ice in Antarctica to rapid
atmospheric warming in the North Atlantic.
"Our
study shows just how important Antarctica's ice is to the climate of
the rest of the world and reveals how rapid melting of the ice here
can affect us all. This is something we need to be acutely aware of
in a warming world," Professor Turney said.
It
also showed how deeply the climate was linked across great distances
said fellow author and climate modeller from the University of
Tasmania, Dr Steven Phipps.
"Our
research has revealed yet another remarkable example of the
interconnections that are so much a part of our climate system,"
Dr Phipps said.
"By
combining past records of past events with climate modelling, we see
how a change in one region can have major climatic impacts at the
opposite ends of the Earth."
###
This
research was funded by the Australian Research Council and the United
Kingdom's Natural Environmental Research Council.
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