100,000 year ice age cycle linked to orbital periods and sea ice

From BROWN UNIVERSITY

Earth’s orbital variations and sea ice synch glacial periods

The Southern Hemisphere has a higher capacity to grow sea ice than the Northern Hemisphere, where continents block growth. New research shows that the expansion of Southern Hemisphere sea ice during certain periods in Earth's orbital cycles can control the pace of the planet's ice ages. CREDITJung-Eun Lee / Brown University
The Southern Hemisphere has a higher capacity to grow sea ice than the Northern Hemisphere, where continents block growth. New research shows that the expansion of Southern Hemisphere sea ice during certain periods in Earth’s orbital cycles can control the pace of the planet’s ice ages. CREDITJung-Eun Lee / Brown University

PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — Earth is currently in what climatologists call an interglacial period, a warm pulse between long, cold ice ages when glaciers dominate our planet’s higher latitudes. For the past million years, these glacial-interglacial cycles have repeated roughly on a 100,000-year cycle. Now a team of Brown University researchers has a new explanation for that timing and why the cycle was different before a million years ago.

Using a set of computer simulations, the researchers show that two periodic variations in Earth’s orbit combine on a 100,000-year cycle to cause an expansion of sea ice in the Southern Hemisphere. Compared to open ocean waters, that ice reflects more of the sun’s rays back into space, substantially reducing the amount of solar energy the planet absorbs. As a result, global temperature cools.

“The 100,000-year pace of glacial-interglacial periods has been difficult to explain,” said Jung-Eun Lee, an assistant professor in Brown’s Department of Earth, Environmental and Planetary Studies and the study’s lead author. “What we were able to show is the importance of sea ice in the Southern Hemisphere along with orbital forcings in setting the pace for the glacial-interglacial cycle.”

The research is published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.

Orbit and climate

In the 1930s, Serbian scientist Milutin Milankovitch identified three different recurring changes in Earth’s orbital pattern. Each of these Milankovitch Cycles can influence the amount of sunlight the planet receives, which in turn can influence climate. The changes cycle through every 100,000, 41,000 and 21,000 years.

The problem is that the 100,000-year cycle alone is the weakest of the three in the degree to which it affects solar radiation. So why that cycle would be the one that sets the pace of glacial cycle is a mystery. But this new study shows the mechanism through which the 100,000-year cycle and the 21,000-year cycle work together to drive Earth’s glacial cycle.

The 21,000-year cycle deals with precession — the change in orientation of Earth’s tilted rotational axis, which creates Earth’s changing seasons. When the Northern Hemisphere is tilted toward the sun, it gets more sunlight and experiences summer. At the same time, the Southern Hemisphere is tilted away, so it gets less sunlight and experiences winter. But the direction that the axis points slowly changes — or precesses — with respect to Earth’s orbit. As a result, the position in the orbit where the seasons change migrates slightly from year to year. Earth’s orbit is elliptical, which means the distance between the planet and the sun changes depending on where we are in the orbital ellipse. So precession basically means that the seasons can occur when the planet is closest or farthest from the sun, or somewhere in between, which alters the seasons’ intensity.

In other words, precession causes a period during the 21,000-year cycle when Northern Hemisphere summer happens around the time when the Earth is closest to the sun, which would make those summers slightly warmer. Six months later, when the Southern Hemisphere has its summer, the Earth would be at its furthest point from the sun, making the Southern Hemisphere summers a little cooler. Every 10,500 years, the scenario is the opposite.

In terms of average global temperature, one might not expect precession to matter much. Whichever hemisphere is closer to the sun in its summer, the other hemisphere will be farther away during its summer, so the effects would just wash themselves out. However, this study shows that there can indeed be an effect on global temperature if there’s a difference in the way the two hemispheres absorb solar energy — which there is.

That difference has to do with each hemisphere’s capacity to grow sea ice. Because of the arrangement of the continents, there’s much more room for sea ice to grow in the Southern Hemisphere. The oceans of the Northern Hemisphere are interrupted by continents, which limits the extent to which ice can grow. So when the precessional cycle causes a series of cooler summers in the Southern Hemisphere, sea ice can expand dramatically because there’s less summer melting.

Lee’s climate models rely on the simple idea that sea ice reflects a significant amount of solar radiation back into space that would normally be absorbed into the ocean. That reflection of radiation can lower global temperature.

“What we show is that even if the total incoming energy is the same throughout the whole precession cycle, the amount of energy the Earth actually absorbs does change with precession,” Lee said. “The large Southern Hemispheric sea ice that forms when summers are cooler reduces the energy absorbed.”

But that leaves the question of why the precession cycle, which repeats every 21,000 years, would cause a 100,000-year glacial cycle. The answer is that the 100,000-year orbital cycle modulates the effects of the precession cycle.

The 100,000-year cycle deals with the eccentricity of Earth’s orbit — meaning the extent to which it deviates from a circle. Over a period of 100,000 years, the orbital shape goes from almost circular to more elongated and back again. It’s only when eccentricity is high — meaning the orbit is more elliptical — that there’s a significant difference between the Earth’s furthest point from the sun and its closest. As a result, there’s only a large difference in the intensity of seasons due to precession when eccentricity is large.

“When eccentricity is small, precession doesn’t matter,” Lee said. “Precession only matters when eccentricity is large. That’s why we see a stronger 100,000-year pace than a 21,000-year pace.”

Lee’s models show that, aided by high eccentricity, cool Southern Hemisphere summers can decrease by as much as 17 percent the amount of summer solar radiation absorbed by the planet over the latitude where the difference in sea ice distribution is largest — enough to cause significant global cooling and potentially creating the right conditions for an ice age.

Aside from radiation reflection, there may be additional cooling feedbacks started by an increase in southern sea ice, Lee and her colleagues say. Much of the carbon dioxide — a key greenhouse gas — exhaled into the atmosphere from the oceans comes from the southern polar region. If that region is largely covered in ice, it may hold that carbon dioxide in like a cap on a soda bottle. In addition, energy normally flows from the ocean to warm the atmosphere in winter as well, but sea ice insulates and reduces this exchange. So having less carbon and less energy transferred between the atmosphere and the ocean add to the cooling effect.

Explaining a shift

The findings may also help explain a puzzling shift in the Earth’s glacial cycle. For the past million years or so, the 100,000-year glacial cycle has been the most prominent. But before a million years ago, paleoclimate data suggest that pace of the glacial cycle was closer to about 40,000 years. That suggests that the third Milankovitch Cycle, which repeats every 41,000 years, was dominant then.

While the precession cycle deals with which direction the Earth’s axis is pointing, the 41,000-year cycle deals with how much the axis is tilted. The tilt — or obliquity — changes from a minimum of about 22 degrees to a maximum of around 25 degrees. (It’s at 23 degrees at the moment.) When obliquity is higher, each of the poles gets more sunlight, which tends to warm the planet.

So why would the obliquity cycle be the most important one before a million years ago, but become less important more recently?

According to Lee’s models, it has to do with the fact that the planet has been generally cooler over the past million years than it was prior to that. The models show that, when the Earth was generally warmer than today, precession-related sea ice expansion in the Southern Hemisphere is less likely to occur. That allows the obliquity cycle to dominate the global temperature signature. After a million years ago, when Earth became a bit cooler on average, the obliquity signal starts to take a back seat to the precession/eccentricity signal.

Lee and her colleagues believe their models present a strong new explanation for the history of Earth’s glacial cycle — explaining both the more recent pace and the puzzling transition a million years ago.

As for the future of the glacial cycle, that remains unclear, Lee says. It’s difficult at this point to predict how human contributions to Earth’s greenhouse gas concentrations might alter the future of Earth’s ice ages.

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Gloateus Maximus
January 28, 2017 6:38 am

Milankovitch cycles have been observed in climatic phenomena from earlier in the Cenozoic, as below, Mesozoic and Paleozoic Eras. Dunno about Precambrian.
http://mgg.tongji.edu.cn/space/tianjun/files/2010/02/Tian-et-al.2013G3.pdf

Gloateus Maximus
Reply to  Gloateus Maximus
January 28, 2017 6:43 am

Yup. Mesoproterozoic, about 1.3 billion years ago:
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095383615301644
Carbonate strata of the Mesoproterozoic Wumishan Formation in the Jixian area near Tianjin are ~3300 m thick and were deposited over some 100 million years (from ~1310±20 Ma to ~1207±10 Ma). Metre-scale cycles (parasequences) dominate the succession. They are generally of the peritidal carbonate type, and mostly show an approximately symmetrical lithofacies succession with thick stromatolite biostromes and small thromboliteoncolite bioherms constituting the central part and tidal-flat dolomites forming the upper and lower parts. Lagoonal-supratidal dolomitic shales with palaeosol caps make up the topmost layers. The boundaries of the Wumishan cycles are typically exposure surfaces, and there is abundant evidence for fresh-water diagenesis.
Widespread 1:4 stacking patterns indicate that the individual Wumishan cycles are sixth-order parasequences, with 4 parasequences constituting one fifth-order parasequence set. Locally, 5–8 beds or couplets, can be discerned in some of the cycles. The regular vertical stacking pattern of beds within the sixth-order parasequences, forming the fifth-order parasequence sets, are interpreted as the result of environmental fluctuations controlled by Milankovitch rhythms, namely the superimposition of precession, and short and long-eccentricity. The widespread 1:4 stacking pattern in the cyclic succession, as well as the local 1:5–8 stacking patterns of the beds within the cycles, suggest that the Milankovitch rhythms had similar ratios in the Mesoproterozoic as in the Phanerozoic. Based on the cycle stacking patterns, 26 third-order sequences can be distinguished and these group into 6 second-order, transgressive-regressive megasequences (or sequence sets), all reflecting a composite, hierarchical succession of relative sea-level changes.

Reply to  Gloateus Maximus
January 29, 2017 12:05 am

Thanks GM
I heard somewhere that precession cycling and a layering pattern thereof is quite ubiquitous in certain rock formations.

Gloateus Maximus
Reply to  Gloateus Maximus
January 29, 2017 4:34 am

Ptolemy,
Yup, especially with the 41 K tilt cycle. In rocks from both the Proterozoic and Phanerozoic Eons, as I now know. Dunno about the Archaean.

Gloateus Maximus
Reply to  Gloateus Maximus
January 29, 2017 8:37 am

Looking back billions of years, this paper studied the evolution of Milankovitch cycles and the earth-moon system (earth spinning faster when the moon was closer) by comparing stripes in Banded Iron Formations and other Archaean and Proterozoic sediments with a set of theoretical Milankovitch and tidal frequencies:
http://www.cfca.nao.ac.jp/~tito/ftp/psdoc/EPSL1993.pdf

Gloateus Maximus
Reply to  Gloateus Maximus
February 2, 2017 11:18 am

IMO it makes sense that the tilt cycle is the most important. After all, it is earth’s obliquity to its axis which gives us our seasons. Changes in this angle can affect climate as well.

co2islife
January 28, 2017 8:34 am

This was a great article that filled in a lot of holes with the geological record and explains why temperatures lead CO2 to emerge from and ice age, and why temperatures lead CO2 to fall back into an ice age. Coincidentally I just finished up an article that hits on a similar topic and links back to this one.
Climate “Science” on Trial; Sea Ice Sophistry
https://co2islife.wordpress.com/2017/01/28/climate-science-on-trial-sea-ice-sophistry/

Reply to  co2islife
January 29, 2017 10:42 am

I agree with your article, It is the water cycle responding to solar radiation that is controlling the skin surface temperature of the earth. Because there is so much water in all it’s phases, skin surface temperature is closer to measured dew/frost point than it is at atmospheric temperature measured a couple of meters above the surface. The surface (skin) will radiate at that temperature. Also, the tops of clouds radiate at the temperature at which they are caused by condensation or evaporation. The energy exchange associated with CO2 radiation is a drop in the bucket compared to the energy exchange in these processes. Atmospheric concentrations of CO2 are just going along for the ride. Water cycles are controlling atmospheric CO2 cycles. Annual sea ice cycles are just one of these controlling factors.

co2islife
Reply to  fhhaynie
January 29, 2017 10:45 am

Thanks a million for the comment, greatly appreciated.

Gloateus Maximus
January 28, 2017 8:46 am

Javier,
Your article at Curry’s site states that Milankovitch is wrong about insolation at 65 N, but in the wider sense of the impact of celestial mechanics on climate, he and his predecessors were right.
https://judithcurry.com/2016/10/24/nature-unbound-i-the-glacial-cycle/
The debate is over which orbital and rotational cycles are most important. I’m with you on tilt, but the other cycles have an effect, as you demonstrate, as do other factors. But it appears well supported IMO that obliquity primarily rules.

Gloateus Maximus
Reply to  Gloateus Maximus
January 28, 2017 8:51 am

I also find it convincing that the mid-Pleistocene transition from 41 to (apparently) ~100 millennia-long glacial phases can be explained simply by a world grown colder, with ~100K as the rough average of 82 and 123K years.

tom s
January 28, 2017 9:10 am

I like interglacials and wish that this one would live up to the previous…ie about 2-3C warmer than today. Let’s go Earth, you-can-do-it!

Mary Ballon
January 28, 2017 9:47 am

Where does plate tectonics fit in to these cycles?

Gloateus Maximus
Reply to  Mary Ballon
January 28, 2017 10:02 am

Plate tectonics set the stage for the glaciations by separating Antarctica from South America and Australia about 34 million years ago and by connecting the Americas some three Ma.

TLMango
January 28, 2017 1:22 pm

The Earth/Moon system is a binary relationship.
The Earth’s inside is made up of layers having variable densities.
This allows its iron core to rotate independent of the outer layers
and the outer crust. During inter-glacials the iron core not only rotates
but wobbles and presses outward. This is what gives us geomagnetism,
geomagnetic jerk, length of day, plate tectonics, volcanic activity and
magnetic field production.
The Milankovic cycles are in fact accelerations of the Sun directed in
specific directions (vector quantities). When the Sun loses its acceleration
the Earth’s iron core loses its wobble. Magnetic field production is diminished
and much of the heat that is associated with an active inner core is lost.
Plate tectonics and volcanic activity are reduced.

Gloateus Maximus
Reply to  TLMango
January 28, 2017 1:40 pm

The eccentricity of earth’s orbit owes to the gravitational attractions of Jupiter, Saturn and other celestial bodies in the solar system.

January 31, 2017 1:15 pm

The various hemispheric difficulties that scientists have experienced in using insolation from the Milankovitch rhythms to explain glacial/interglacial episodes disappear when one realizes that insolation probably isn’t the operative mechanism after all. Gravity probably is. It is well known that tidal effects from Moon correlate well with volcanic eruptions. It’s therefore likely that Milankovitch rhythms are effective in stimulating and repressing the hair-trigger mechanism of sea floor spreading and its attendant volcanism, of which there are basically two kinds: far-plate edge explosive andesitic and near-plate edge non-explosive basaltic. The former are well known to cause global cooling through stratospheric aerosol formation, whereas the latter, which emit hydrogen chloride and bromide, but don’t form aerosols, can cause global warming through ozone layer depletion, allowing a greater influx of solar UV-B. This, then, could be the real cause of the glacial/interglacial oscillation. More on this in Chapter Three of “The Real World, a Synthesis” on amazon.com.

February 1, 2017 3:21 am

It was James Croll who first identified different recurring changes in Earth’s orbital pattern, not Milutin Milankovitch.

Reply to  loisannjohnson
February 1, 2017 5:28 am

You’re quite right about that, loisannjohnson, and I did know it. I can only plead carelessness in not giving him proper credit for his work.