Glacier loss in Hawaii tied to change in North Atlantic AMOC current

Mauna Kea glacial deposits Gray rubble on the flanks of Mauna Kea on the island of Hawaii lie in contrast to the red volcanic rock behind them, and were deposited by a glacier that disappeared thousands of years ago. (Photo courtesy of Oregon State University)

From an Oregon State University press release:

Ancient Hawaiian glaciers reveal clues to global climate impacts

CORVALLIS, Ore. – Boulders deposited by an ancient glacier that once covered the summit of Mauna Kea on the island of Hawaii have provided more evidence of the extraordinary power and reach of global  change, particularly the slowdown of a North Atlantic Ocean current system that could happen again and continues to be a concern to climate scientists.

A new study has found geochemical clues near the summit of Mauna Kea that tell a story of ancient glacier formation, the influence of the most recent ice age, more frequent major storms in Hawaii, and the impact of a distant climatic event that changed much of the world.

The research was published in Earth and Planetary Science Letters by scientists from Oregon State University, the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, University of British Columbia and U.S. Geological Survey. The work was supported by the National Science Foundation.

“Mauna Kea had a large glacial ice cap of about 70 square kilometers until 14,500 years ago, which has now all disappeared,” said Peter Clark, a professor of geosciences at OSU. “We’ve been able to use new data to determine specifically when, where and most likely why the glacier existed and then disappeared.”

Mauna Kea, at 13,803 feet above sea level, is in a sense the tallest mountain in the world because it rises 30,000 feet from the sea floor. Dormant for thousands of years, it once featured a large glacier on its massive peak at the height of the last ice age about 21,000 years ago. As the ice age ended and the global climate warmed, the glacier began to disappear.

photo
Peter Clark, a professor of geosciences at Oregon State University, stands in a field of glacial debris on the mountain of Mauna Kea in Hawaii, left there by an ancient glacier. (Photo courtesy of Oregon State University)

However, the new research found that the glacier on Mauna Kea began to re-advance to almost its ice age size about 15,400 years ago. That coincides almost exactly with a major slowdown of what scientists call the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation, or AMOC, in the North Atlantic Ocean.

The AMOC is part of a global ocean circulation system that carries heat from the tropics to the North Atlantic. This transported heat is the primary reason that much of Europe is warmer in the winter than would be expected, given the latitude of the continent.

Studies of past climate change indicate that the AMOC has slowed a number of times, in surprisingly short periods, causing substantial cooling of Europe. Because of that, the potential future decline of the current is of considerable interest.

But scientists have found that the AMOC does more than just keep northern Europe habitable. Its effects can extend far beyond that.

“The new data from Mauna Kea, along with other findings from geological archives preserved in oceans and lakes in many other areas, show that the decline of the AMOC basically caused climate changes all over the world,” Clark said. “These connections are pretty remarkable, a current pattern in the North Atlantic affecting glacier development thousands of miles away in the Hawaiian Islands.

“The global impact of the AMOC changes,” Clark added, “was just massive.”

The formation, size and movement of glaciers can provide valuable data, he said, because these characteristics reflect current and historic changes in temperature, precipitation or both.

The study concludes that the growth of the Mauna Kea glacier caused by the AMOC current changes was a result of both colder conditions and a huge increase of precipitation on Mauna Kea – triple that of the present – that scientists believe may have been caused by more frequent cyclonic storm events hitting the Hawaiian Islands from the north.

The findings were supported by measurements of an isotope of helium being produced in boulders left by the Mauna Kea glacier thousands of years ago. The amount of this helium isotope reveals when the boulders were finally uncovered by ice and exposed to the atmosphere.

The deposits containing the boulders are the only record of glaciation in the northern subtropical Pacific Ocean. Nearby Mauna Loa probably also was glaciated, but evidence of its glaciation has since been destroyed by volcanic eruptions.

The study by Clark and colleagues provides additional evidence that rapid changes in the AMOC can trigger widespread global change. Some past abrupt decreases in the AMOC have been linked to an increase of freshwater flowing off the continents into the North Atlantic.

The potential under global warming for increases in freshwater from melting ice and changes in precipitation patterns have heightened concerns about the AMOC and related climate effects in the future, researchers said.

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Editor
August 6, 2010 9:29 pm

Mods – Italics are stuck on – at “Tenuc says: August 6, 2010 at 9:36 am” there’s a <i /> that should be </i>.
Wordpress bug….
REPLY: Yes a WP bug, we keep fixing it. -A

Tom in Florida
August 7, 2010 5:54 am

Wonder where the Mauna Kea vent was 15,000 years ago?

bill johnston
August 7, 2010 6:50 am

Ed_B says: Aug 6,2010. “No need to blame humans”. They have to blame humans because otherwise there would be no money in it.

August 7, 2010 10:30 am

Paul Vaughan says: August 6, 2010 at 3:04 am
“Some past abrupt decreases in the AMOC have been linked to an increase of freshwater flowing off the continents into the North Atlantic.”
Anyone have some references for this?

Laurentide ice sheet was melting down between 18000 – 4500BC, the Hudson bay area was last to melt. (I referred to it http://www.vukcevic.talktalk.net/NATA.htm p.4)
Volume of water contained was sufficient to raise oceans level 40-50 m. Even now some 6500 years after it disappeared, the Hudson Bay area has an uplift 2-3 m /century.
I did quick calculation and if you assume constant TSI (ha!) (overall average 330 cu km /annum) or assuming area reduction (square law) I came up with this table:
K years ago…………outflow cu km
18…………1299264
17…………921464
16…………653520
15…………463490
14…………328716
13…………233132
12…………165342
11…………117264
10…………83166
9…………58983
8…………41832
7…………29668
6…………21041
Outflow in the last millennium comes down to 1.6% of that in the first.

Kevin Kilty
August 7, 2010 11:11 am

Billy Liar says:
August 6, 2010 at 4:24 am
stephen richards says:
August 6, 2010 at 2:50 am
My thoughts too.
Maybe it was just a névé, a patch of permanent snow/ice with no flow. Glaciers in Iceland with nearby lava have reduced the lava to black sand by repeated freeze/thaw cycles.

My wife is a glacial geologist, er was one in graduate school, and she has explained to me that the “glaciers” on Kilimanjaro, were never thick enough to flow and become true glaciers. That is why they look to me like cuts through snow banks rather than like any glacier I have ever seen. They are essentially snow fields–Thanks, Billy, for the term Neve. Do these cut the rocks so covered off from the atmosphere as glaciers would? I dunno, but people are quick to call things “glaciers” when they are not.

August 7, 2010 11:18 am

vukcevic etc. says: August 7, 2010 at 10:30 am
P.S. Of course ice melt did not start at max rate, so you could take into account the Milankovic tilt change, and possibly assume no area reduction for the first couple of millennia.
Probably as good as any proxy database (?!).

August 7, 2010 12:31 pm

Tenuc says: August 6, 2010 at 9:36 am
I also think that a slow gulf stream would have little immediate effect on Europe, but would probably have an instant effect on the Arctic.
I think Gulf stream left to its own devices would not vary much. The change on it is imposed by Arctic overflow through deep and narrow funnel shaped channel of highly saline fast arctic current into North Atlantic, for a more detailed view, zoom in on
http://maps.grida.no/go/graphic/arctic-topography-and-bathymetry
Velocity of this current was in past up to twice the current rate.
Geomagnetic field at this point shows high degree of correlation ( Rsq=0.66) with the Loehle’s global temperature reconstruction.
http://www.vukcevic.talktalk.net/LFC1.htm
There is about 20 year delay between GMF and temperature.
According Hakkinen (NASA Goddard Space Flight Center), and Rhines (University of Washington), referencing earlier data to TOPEX/Poseidon altimeter data, and translating the satellite sea-surface height data to velocities of the subpolar gyre, the subpolar gyre can take 20 years to complete its route.
http://oceanmotion.org/html/impact/climate-variability.htm
See also http://www.vukcevic.talktalk.net/NATA.htm

R. de Haan
August 7, 2010 2:21 pm

crosspatch says:
August 6, 2010 at 12:16 am
“Why must they always have that final paragraph about “global warming”? It seems somehow obligatory”.
That’s why they get paid.