This is big news. I posted four years ago now that the most
likely explanation for the apparent changes in the climate and in particular,
the specific erosion of sea ice in the Arctic was a specific change in the
total heat been delivered by the Gulf Stream which we may simply label delta
H. Simply applying a delta H since the
seventies perfectly explains our observations since then and led me to predict
a possible pending complete breakup of the Arctic sea ice as early as 2012 and
inevitably soon thereafter.
We continue to have warmer than
normal Arctic conditions. However the
Navy is claiming that the ice has finally began to thicken again over the past
two years. So far it is the only
available evidence that the warming delta H may have ended. If it has ended, then an Arctic breakup is
aborted.
This report tells us that for the
past forty years that the Labrador Current was much weaker. This means several things.
1
A strong current mixed vigorously with the Gulf Stream , partially cooling it. This was hugely reduced when the current
abated.
2
A warmer Gulf Stream carried more heat or delta H as a
consequence into the Arctic and was
instrumental in eroding the sea ice.
3
An offsetting counter flow somewhere else took over and
this had little effect on the Gulf Stream . The net effect was to modestly strengthen the
Gulf Stream .
Now the geological record shows
us that the Gulf Stream has been much warmer
by a couple of degrees and that long cyclic warm eras are common. If my own interpretation holds up, we are
entering a prolonged warm period in Europe similar to the Medieval optimum as
part of an apparent thousand year cycle that I have been able to identify on a
preliminary basis over 5,000 years.
I would be quite surprised if the
implied claim of no similar events for 1800 years were to hold up. Right now we have a well positioned coral
reef able to act as a monitor. There
will be others and we may be able to go further with this form of testing.
ATLANTIC CIRCULATION ON THE
FASTTRACK FOR CHANGE
Analysis by Tim Wall
Tue Jan 4, 2011 05:55 PM ET
Bell-bottom jeans, Abba, and the Labrador Current
-- one of the three is not making a retro comeback. Temperature-tracking coral
reefs indicate that the circulation of water in the Atlantic
Ocean has changed dramatically since the 1970's.
That could be part of the reason areas in the
northern hemisphere have had harsh winter storms and summer droughts say
researchers.
The evidence for changing currents comes from
ancient gorgonian coral reefs growing
off the coast of Nova Scotia .
The reef was studied by a team of biochemists and oceanographers from Switzerland , Canada ,
and the United States .
Like most organisms, corals are what they eat
and changes in their diet are recorded in the reef structure.
The Canadian corals showed that the cold,
south-bound Labrador current is
losing ground to the warm, north-bound Gulf Stream current. The corals of the deep
north Atlantic have been feasting on
nutrient-rich warm water since the 1970's.
The researchers looked at the concentrations of a
certain isotope of nitrogen, called delta
15. Different concentrations of the isotope allow scientists to trace a
creature's food sources.
The levels the researchers found in the Nova
Scotian coral indicated the coral had been feeding heavily on nutrients brought
north from the subtropical regions for approximately 40 years.
The coral had been feeding primarily on
subarctic nutrients for the previous 1800 years.
That abrupt change in food sources caused by
changes in currents coincides closely with the onset of observable changes in
Earth's climate caused by industrialization.
"The researchers suspect there is a direct
connection between the changes in oceanic currents in the North Atlantic and
global warming caused by human activities," said one of the participating
institutions, the Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Sciences and
Technology in a statement to the Associated Foreign Press.
The coral reef research was published recently in
the Proceedings of the National Academy
of Sciences.
Recent heavy snowfalls and harsh winter storms
along with droughts and heat waves in the summer, could be explained by a
changes in the circulation of the Atlantic 's
water, say climate researchers. A 2004 paper by NASA explained
the possibility of melting arctic sea ice triggering colder weather in Europe
and North America .
As my colleague, Mr. Cox, pointed out in the
above blog post, the term global warming is a misnomer in many senses. Humanity
faces global climate destabilization. The weather patterns our agriculture and
industry have adapted to over the centuries are changing rapidly.
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