Ponderous Pachyderms Prevent Permafrost

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

Anthony Watts has pointed to a curious new paper in his article “Climate Craziness of the Week: The AGU peddles a mammoth climate change theory”  I thought I’d use it as an example of how I take a first cut at whether a theory is reasonable or not. The new paper claims that the extinctualization of the mammoths warmed the world.

The original article is reviewed on ScienceNow, and is accompanied by this image:

Figure 1. Mammoths, the animals that can blow both hot and cold.

Gotta love these folks, no matter what happens it changes the climate. I discussed in my post “Anthropogenic Decline in Natural Gas” the previous study that claimed that the loss of mammoth flatulence when the mammoths were extinctified was the cause of radical global cooling. Now the same mammoth extinctivication is claimed to have caused global warming. Here is the new claim:

Earth system scientist Chris Doughty of the Carnegie Institution for Science in Stanford, California, and colleagues decided to find out whether the change in Betula [birch tree] proliferation was connected to the disappearance of the mammoths. They started by studying Betula pollen records compiled from soil cores taken in Siberia and Beringia. Next, the team examined mammoth fossil records to establish the timeline for their disappearance from the region. They also used studies of elephant-feeding habits to estimate the impact of the loss of the mammoths on the grasslands, and they applied climate models to compute the effect of the vegetation change on global temperatures.

The results, the researchers report in a paper to be published in an upcoming issue of Geophysical Research Letters, suggest that when the mammoths disappeared, the Betula trees expanded across Beringia, forming forests that replaced as much as one-quarter of the grassland. The trees’ leaves, which are darker than grasses, absorbed more solar radiation, and their trunks and branches, which jutted above the snowpack, continued the effect even in winter. The researchers calculated that the mammoths’ disappearance contributed at least 0.1˚C to the average warming of the world around 15,000 years ago. Within Beringia, the warming due to the loss of the mammoths was probably closer to 0.2˚C, the team concluded.

To figure out if something like this makes sense, I generally do a back-of-the-envelope type of calculation. My cut on this particular one is as follows:

1. Figure out the surface area that we are talking about.

2. Figure out the change in albedo.

3. Figure out the change in forcing and thus the change in temperature.

First, the area. At the time in question, the mammoths were centered in an area called “Beringia”, which stretched from 60° to 75°N, and from 150°W to 170°E. This area comprises 0.6% of the surface area of the planet. Let’s triple that to make sure we have a conservative estimate, so we have 2% of the surface area.

Next, the change in albedo. “Albedo over the boreal forest”  gives the following figures:

Representative daily average albedo values in summer are 0.2 over grass, 0.15 for aspen, and 0.083 for the conifer sites. In winter the corresponding mean albedo for snow-covered grass, aspen, and conifer sites with snow under the canopy are 0.75, 0.21, and 0.13. … . Forest albedo increases at all sites in winter (with snow on the ground under the canopy) as the ratio of diffuse to total solar flux increases.

From this we can see that the difference is small in the summer. It is theoretically larger in the winter, but in the winter there is very little heating from the sun because it is so low on the horizon. In addition, this increases the albedo of all surfaces, because of the increased reflectance due to the low angle of incidence. Finally, the low birch trees described in the source article would have greater winter albedo than the aspen, because more of the snow would show through underneath.

So lets use .2 and .8 for the summer and winter albedo for grass, and .15 and .55 for the summer and winter albedo for dwarf birch. These average out to .5 for grass and 0.35 for dwarf birch. This means birch growth increases the absorbed sunlight by about 50%. However, not all of the land surface will be changed. Let’s be real generous and say that half the land surface in the mammoth area is actually where they graze, although it is likely much less than that. There’s a lot of barren land that far north, mountains and bogs and such. So the increase in absorbed sunlight might be 25%. Then the authors (above) say that the extinguination of the mammoths would change a quarter of the grazing area. So we’re down to about a 6% change in albedo. (In fact it will be less, because the higher winter albedo affects less incoming sun, but we’ll leave it at that to make sure the figures are conservative).

Now, how much will that change the absorbed sunlight? Well, Anne Wilber et al. put the annual surface sunlight absorbed by the surface at 60°-75°N (the mammoth range) at 100 W/m2. They also give an average albedo for the area of 0.34.

But the most interesting thing about the Wilber et al. study is this: in the far northern regions, the average net short wave (the amount of sunlight absorbed by the surface) has almost nothing to do with the surface conditions. Figure 2 shows the map of the downwelling short wave (DSW, the amount of sunlight striking the surface) and the net short wave (NSW, the amount of sunlight absorbed by the surface) averaged over the year.

Figure 2. Solar flux. (a) Solar radiation striking the surface (downwelling shortwave, DSW). (b) Absorbed solar radiation (net shortwave, NSW) at the surface.

In Fig. 2(b) we see that while in the tropical regions there are clear differences between things like deserts, rainforests, and the ocean, this is not true in the far North. Up there in Mammothville, you can see very little difference between energy absorbed by the ocean and the land. In addition there is very little variation within the land itself, with the exception of the perpetual ice cover of Greenland.

This is for two reasons. First, the surface radiation in the far north is dominated by clouds, not the surface. Second, the composition of the surface makes little difference. The surface albedo is high because of the low angle of the sun, not because of the exact composition of the surface.

In any case, we can see that any changes in the surface albedo of the far north, such as the change due to mammoth extinctualations, do not affect the overall albedo very much. The Wilber et al. study puts the change in ground cover as explaining only about 2% of the absorbed sunlight. That’s the maximum that changing the surface albedo will do.

So the maximum change from mammoth extinguishment is 2% of the absorbed sunlight due to surface albedo, times 100 W/m2 insolation in the mammoth area, times 2% of the surface covered by mammoths, times a 6% increase in absorbed sunlight from the surface change due to birch growth. This gives us a change of about 0.0025 watts per square metre … which using the Stefan-Boltzmann law gives us a temperature change of .00045°. This would be increased by the greenhouse effect by about 35%. That would give us a temperature change of 0.0006° …

Now my estimate could be low by an order of magnitude (a factor of 10). Seems doubtful, because I’ve used fairly conservative numbers. But it’s certainly possible. Mammoths might have covered a larger area, my other estimates could have been low, this kind of calculation is usually only good to within an order of magnitude.

And it’s possible that it is out by two orders of magnitude. But I’d say that was very doubtful. And that’s how far wrong it would have to be to match their estimate of a .1°C change from mammoths.

My conclusion? Nothing firm, because this is a back-of-the-envelope calculation. However, the calculation says that it’s very doubtful that mammoth exstrangulation caused the planet to warm … I’d have to see a whole lot of very solid data before I’d believe that one.

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DirkH
July 2, 2010 7:38 am

Curious Yellow says:
July 2, 2010 at 5:22 am
“[…]
WASHINGTON—Even before the dawn of agriculture, people MAY HAVE caused the planet to warm up, a new study SUGGEST.
Note the deception in the headline? Definitive versus non-definitive. […]”
Curious Yellow, MAY, COULD, SUGGEST, etc – was there ever one AGW study that doesn’t use these words in every conclusion? AGW never makes a prediction, AGW never says something definitive, AGW is not a scientific theory. It’s always WOULD, COULD, MAYBE, MAYBE NOT, DUNNO, WE THINK IT WAS CO2, COULDN’T HAVE BEEN ANYTHING ELSE.
You want us to wait for a study or version of the “theory” that makes a verifiable prediction? In other words, you want us to stay silent FOREVER because there will never be a verifiable prediction. Sorry no deal.

lOKKI
July 2, 2010 7:48 am

I get so confused. Now I understand that dinosaurs were not mammals, but (without bothering to do the research) one would assume that, having a similar herbivorian diet, that dinosaurs would have farted methane at roughly the same levels as mammoths, and that having a similar bulk that they’d have trampled down the birch trees to a similar extent as the mammoths.
However, as I recall things, there was a massive temperature DROP at the time that the dinosaurs disappeared. How could that have happened.
Oh, and continuing with the buffalo extinction, not only did the extinction of the buffalo not cause global warming, their extinction was shortly followed by one of the worst blizzards in recorded history the famous blizzard of 1888.
Sigh, if only I were a scientist with a grant, perhaps I could wrap my head around these conundrums.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Blizzard_of_1888

July 2, 2010 8:59 am

Sending you a box of blank envelopes.
I once spent a futile year trying to teach my employees this seemingly simple skill. No luck. The urge to overcomplication, especially amongst the scientifically inclined, was dominant.
Ah ya, it became a good interviewing tool as well.
1. estimate the number of 42 year old males in the US.
2. estimate the number of people landing at O hare in a year.

Mescalero
July 2, 2010 9:36 am

If mammoth extinction caused global warming what was the cause of Mammoths being frozen to death, practically in-situ, in Siberia? Obviously the Siberian mammoths were caught in a climatic tipping point not of their own making.

Gail Combs
July 2, 2010 9:44 am

Edward Bancroft says:
July 2, 2010 at 3:13 am
So, if we want to avoid further global warming now, we just increase the number of elephants in the world?
________________
Nuke says:
July 2, 2010 at 6:47 am
The second half of the equation is to pay people to pick up the elephant droppings and properly store it for carbon sequestration.
Bonus: It’s a green job!
________________
I suggest we assign the job to Hansen, Mann, Schmidt and Jones among others.

jorgekafkazar
July 2, 2010 10:38 am

DirkH says: “Curious Yellow, MAY, COULD, SUGGEST, etc – was there ever one AGW study that doesn’t use these words in every conclusion? AGW never makes a prediction, AGW never says something definitive, AGW is not a scientific theory. It’s always WOULD, COULD, MAYBE, MAYBE NOT, DUNNO, WE THINK IT WAS CO2, COULDN’T HAVE BEEN ANYTHING ELSE.”
Moreover, somehow, those weasel words, could, would, might, and may, when translated into political terms, instantly become shall, must, have to, and “there will be consequences for non-compliance.”
Science-weasels seem to think that in the social upheaval that follows a UN takeover, they will be at the top of the heap. Not so. Remember what happened in Russia? Intellectuals were among the first to be decimated by the new socialist regime. Their continued existence was unnecessary and…inconvenient.
http://www.ibiblio.org/expo/soviet.exhibit/attack.html

RockyRoad
July 2, 2010 10:55 am

Mescalero says:
July 2, 2010 at 9:36 am
If mammoth extinction caused global warming what was the cause of Mammoths being frozen to death, practically in-situ, in Siberia? Obviously the Siberian mammoths were caught in a climatic tipping point not of their own making.
————-Reply
No, they’re to blame. Let’s call it Pachyderm Global Warming Suicide–PGWS. They apply the same reasoning to CO2, arguing that it repeatedly caused warming and when it got tired of working overtime, it lost warming capacity (or something like that) and that caused the next Ice Age. They should call it the lazy double lag.
But of course there is a corollary to the elephant problem–They’re claiming humans are going cause Global Warming Suicide, too. Let’s call it HGWS.

July 2, 2010 11:03 am

Our atavic memories of mammoths are positive because of all the good moments we experienced barbecuing them ☺

D. King
July 2, 2010 11:19 am

I blame the High Tech Clovis people with all spears and such.

JJB MKI
July 2, 2010 11:22 am

Thanks for another entertaining and revealing article Willis. Beyond the face-value ridiculousness of this fringe AGW trumpeting it seems there is a need in the CAGW camp to rewrite paleo-climatic history in order to fill the mammoth sized holes it blows in the hypothesis.
Another thing it seems to demonstrate, yet again, is how old fashioned confirmation bias can be given an air of respectability when passed off as a computer simulation, and how any computer model with uncertain input parameters will probably carry a bias in one direction or another.
I’m no mathematician, so I’d appreciate any thoughts from people here on whether my reasoning is valid: A modeler can only include known parameters in a model, even if the specific values of these are vague trends. Known parameters will tend to be ones that stick out from the crowd or are pertinent to the modeler’s field of study, and ones that have a significant dynamic range (like ocean oscillation, surface temperatures). This will bias the outcome of the model at the expense of countless ‘quieter’ parameters not included due to their being unknown, not seen as pertinent, being too chaotic to compute or occurring over a larger timescale than the model is designed to cope with. In the real world however, the combined mass of these ignored parameters may act to reduce the significance of parameters that have been included to the final result. Even if you tweak the included parameters until the model works regressively you might be adding yet more weight to the known parameters at the expense of the unknown to give an artificially biased prediction- like pushing down one bubble in the wallpaper only to cause a worse one to pop up elsewhere. Predictions will always favor ‘something interesting happening’ over ‘nothing interesting happening’ because the modeler is only including interesting looking factors in the first place.
The reliance on open-ended models in climate science reminds me of the Wizard of Oz – when you pull apart the IBM supercomputer, you’ll find inside a frail human being. Unfortunately in ‘climate science’ the wizard has so much faith in the machine he doesn’t even seem to realise he’s pulling the strings. The other day I heard the expression ‘to a carpenter, everything begins to look like a nail’. Maybe it could be that to a climate scientist, everything looks like anthropogenic global warming?

D. King
July 2, 2010 11:22 am

their spears
Sorry.

Mescalero
July 2, 2010 11:26 am

Rocky Road–
The next question. If we have found frozen mammoths in Siberia, why haven’t we also found frozen remains of human hunters out to exterminate the mammoths. Might it be that the humans saw the tipping point coming and headed south?

goranj
July 2, 2010 11:43 am

Willis – I love your ballpark reestablishmentifications! If every writer at least thought about reasonability, the world might be a saner place.

July 2, 2010 12:45 pm

Sounds like peer-review in this case amounted to a spell- and grammar-check.

Ken Harvey
July 2, 2010 1:14 pm

Funny that. Mammoths, I infer, ate what a northerner calls grass. That little short stuff a few inches high, I presume. I would have imagined that the eating habits of the mammoth would have been akin to that of the African Elephant, being equipped with very similar eating utensils which give him little in common with a sheep. He eats predominantly leaves. He shuns grass, proper grass four or five feet high, in favour of the leaves of trees and fair sized bushes. Seen several hundreds at least in my time, mostly along the Zambezi Valley, but have never seen them in anything that I would describe as grassland. Seems to me that on what I call grassland he would starve. On balance I would think that tree growth would prosper in the absence of the elephant, and the mammoth I suppose, as the younger stuff wouldn’t get pushed over, but the very much lesser spread of seed would likely push matters somewhat in the opposite direction. I don’t know a worthwhile thing about mammoths I should say, so maybe I am not qualified to comment.

JustPassing
July 2, 2010 1:25 pm

You couldn’t make this up.
Mild weather batters Britains first ‘green’ Island
__________________________________
When the inhabitants of the remote Scottish island of Eigg put their faith in the wind and rain to provide all their electricity they did not reckon for one thing – mild weather.
Now the 95 residents are being asked not to use kettles, toasters or other kitchen appliances after uncharacteristically mild weather caused a critical shortage of power.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/energy/hydro_electricenergy/7858960/Power-rationed-on-green-island-Eigg-after-mild-weather-causes-drought.html

Dr. Dave
July 2, 2010 1:46 pm

Well…we all know Mr. Eschenbach should robustify his data a bit more…
Willis. I loved the Simpsons allegory – I, too, shall welcome our elephant overlords.
A bunch of megafauna went extinct (or went through the process of extinctification) about 10,000 years ago. These include the Giant Short Faced Bear, the American Lion, the Dire Wolf (spinning at my window), the Sabre Toothed Cat and the Mammoth. Oh yeah…and Clovis Man. Did they change the climate or did the climate change them? The American Lion could have taken down a modern grizzly bear for a snack. Somehow I fail to see how the existence of the Mammoth could affect climate one way or the other. Climate, on the other hand, could certainly affect the existence of the Mammoth.

DirkH
July 2, 2010 2:38 pm

Ken Harvey says:
July 2, 2010 at 1:14 pm
“Funny that. Mammoths, I infer, ate what a northerner calls grass. ”
http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/mammal/mammoth/about_mammoths.html
“From the preserved dung of Columbian mammoths found in a Utah cave, a mammoth’s diet consisted primarily of grasses, sedges, and rushes. Just 5% included saltbush wood and fruits, cactus fragments, sagebrush wood, water birch, and blue spruce. So, though primarily a grazer, the Columbian mammoth did a bit of browsing as well.

But of course you’re right… it seems strange that mammoths should shun leaves when elefants love them and are well-equipped to reach them. Maybe the mammoth populations had to resort to gras after destroying all the trees.

Jimbo
July 2, 2010 3:08 pm

I’ve often wondered how the eradication of the Bison might have affected methane levels and consequently AGW induced ‘cooling’ or ‘warming’, take your pick. :o)


The bison were the largest native herbivore on the plains of the West.

Prior to the white man’s arrival on the North American continent, bison were the most numerous of all grazing animals. Estimates of their numbers are only speculative, but may have ranged from 30,000,000 to 75,000,000.
….
By 1889, there were fewer than 1,000 bison left in the United States.”

source: New Mexico State University
***********
AGWers have managed, within the space of several months, to spew out two opposing theories regarding Mammoths causing cooling and warming. Actually this is their new mode of operation: AGW cause warming and cooling, co2 causes warming and cooling, floods and drought etc.

July 2, 2010 4:13 pm

At the time in question, the mammoths were centered in an area called “Beringia”
Actually, at the time (15,000 BP), mammoths ranged across North America and Eurasia. Mastodons ranged across Africa and Central and South America as far south as southern Chile. So the area calculation might need adjusting. Some more interesting factoids:
Mammoths were around for some 4 to 5 million years or more (Pilocene, possibly Miocene origins). We don’t really know how their populations might have waxed and waned during those and subsequent epochs. Both were cosmopolitan herbivores and ate tree leaves, grass, and d*** near anything green.
Mammoths were good eating. People loved mammoths and mastodons, for dinner. Homo erectus dined on mammoths at least as far back as 1.5 mmy BP.
All told, over 40 species and 30 genera of large mammals in the Western Hemisphere went extinct since the Older Dryas, including mammoths, mastodons, giant ground sloths, glyptodonts, saber-toothed tigers, camels and horses. In Eurasia the number of extinctions is higher, and many genera still extant elsewhere (like hippos) were extirpated from Europe and northern Asia.
Stone Age human beings probably had something to do with that. Whether the extinctions and extirpations changed the albedo or megafaunal methane emissions, I don’t know. People also burned entire landscapes, continents even, which resulted in charcoal-colored albedos for at least a few months every year — and less, not more, forests (contrary to the authors’ claim).
Our Holocene is not the first interglacial. It may be the longest lived in 650,000 years, however. If people have had anything to do with that, I say we deserve a pat on the back.

July 2, 2010 5:34 pm

1. The earth has shown over and over again that it is anything but unstable, it does what it does because it was designed by a creator to do what it does and when it does.
2. I’d rather smell more elephants and their excrement than what passes for peer reviewed science on the side of the AGW.

July 2, 2010 5:36 pm

Jimbo,
The best I’ve heard so far is an agreement from a regular over at skeptic science (the home of those skeptical of skeptics)… that co2 used to follow warming trends but now, warming trends follow co2 trends due to changes in the earths atmosphere and greenhouse effect.
oiii my head hurts and I need a beer.

July 2, 2010 5:37 pm

crum I forgot i’m unemployed and my extension ran out.
Anyone got 5 bucks for a good Foster’s or Corona?
Sigh

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