by Chris Ciaccia
October 30,
2019
from
FoxNews Website
A new study by UChicago scientists
show how an increase in Antarctic sea ice
could trigger a chain of events
leading to an ice age.
Image courtesy of Yvonne Firing
Climate alarmists and Sustainable Development
zealots will eventually have to face the music of
massive ice growth in Antarctica, which in turn may
lead to a new ice age that could send planet Earth
into the deep freeze.
Source
Increased Antarctic Sea Ice may have Contributed to Past Ice Ages
Upside-down "rivers" of warm ocean water may be one of the causes of
Antarctica's ice shelves breaking up, leading to a 'rise in sea
levels'...
A new study (Global
Cooling linked to Increased Glacial Carbon Storage via changes in
Antarctic Sea Ice) suggests that, in the past, increases
in Antarctic sea ice in colder
climates may have contributed to ice ages.
Using computer simulations, the research looked at past
changes during the glacial periods and noted that previous
increases in sea ice levels may have significantly altered the
circulation of the ocean, which led to a reverse greenhouse effect
as carbon dioxide levels in the ocean increased and levels in the
air decreased.
"One key question in
the field is still what caused the Earth to periodically cycle
in and out of ice ages," University of Chicago professor and the
study's co-author, Malte Jansen,
said in a statement.
"We are pretty
confident that the carbon balance between the atmosphere and
ocean must have changed, but we don’t quite know how or why."
The last major ice age
ended at the end of the
Pleistocene epoch, about 11,700
years ago, as glaciers have periodically grown and then gotten
smaller.
Researchers believe that
changes to the Earth's orbit may be partly responsible for some of
the Earth's cooling, but additional factors have likely played a
part, Malte Jensen added.
"The most plausible
explanation is that there was some change in how carbon was
divided between the atmosphere and the ocean," Jansen continued.
"There’s no shortage
of ideas about how this happens, but it’s not quite clear how
they all fit together."
Researchers also believe
a mini-ice age may have occurred roughly 12,800 years ago.
It likely stems from
an asteroid impact that "rocked the
Northern Hemisphere" and led to the Younger Dryas climate event.
Jansen pointed out that the Southern Ocean around Antarctica,
"plays a key role in
ocean circulation" due to the deep waters in the region, leading
it to have "outsize[d] consequences."
"What this suggests
is that it’s a feedback loop," said the study's lead author,
Alice Marzocchi.
"As the temperature
drops, less carbon is released into the atmosphere, which
triggers more cooling."
"What surprised me is how much of this increased storage can be
attributed to physical changes alone, with Antarctic sea-ice
cover being the key player," Marzocchi added, noting that future
study of the ocean and the role it plays in the carbon cycle can
help simulate "future environmental change."
The research (Global
Cooling linked to Increased Glacial Carbon Storage via changes in
Antarctic Sea Ice) has been published in the scientific
journal Nature Geoscience.
|