I am not copying the whole paper here but it underlines what I have
come to conclude myself. That the driving force for changes in the
heat flux into the Arctic is a tidal pulse in the Antarctic
Circumpolar Current. This explanation is both simple, persistent and
profoundly elegant.
It is also reasonable that this tidal effect will have a comparable
effect on the opposite side of the globe and thus we likely have
specific local effects at the nine hundred year mark also. In any
case, we have a choke point in the South Atlantic that is affected at
least every 1800 years and reasonably every 900 years which pretty
closely reflects the apparent rough 1100 year cycle suggested by the
data at hand. What the data really reflects is that the data does
have a cycle that spans centuries. Having a natural tidal cycle
allows us to understand that the data presented is a shift in the
distribution curve.
At present we are getting more heat and this allows ice loss to run
along in a variable fashion. When this heat is shut off, the reverse
will occur. The data itself at any point will be confusing and
misleading.
At present the tide is in and conditions are warming. This should
last a while. My best estimate is around one additional century.
The 1,800-year
oceanic tidal cycle: A possible cause of rapid climate change
Charles D. Keeling*
and Timothy P. Whorf
Scripps Institution of
Oceanography, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA
92093-0244
Contributed by Charles
D. Keeling, February 2, 2000
Variations in solar
irradiance are widely believed to explain climatic change on 20,000-
to 100,000-year time-scales in accordance with the Milankovitch
theory of the ice ages, but there is no conclusive
evidence that variable
irradiance can be the cause of abrupt fluctuations in climate on
time-scales as short as 1,000 years. We propose that such abrupt
millennial changes, seen in ice and sedimentary core records, were
produced in part by well characterized, almost periodic variations in
the strength of the global oceanic tide-raising forces caused by
resonances in the periodic motions of the earth and moon. A well
defined 1,800-year tidal cycle is associated with gradually shifting
lunar declination from
one episode of
maximum tidal forcing on the centennial time-scale to the next. An
amplitude modulation of this cycle occurs with an average period of
about 5,000 years, associated with gradually
shifting
separation-intervals between perihelion and syzygy at maxima of the
1,800-year cycle. We propose that strong tidal forcing causes
cooling at the sea surface by increasing vertical mixing in the
oceans. On the millennial time-scale, this tidal hypothesis is
supported by findings, from sedimentary records of ice-rafting
debris, that ocean waters cooled close to the times predicted for
strong tidal forcing.
High resolution
ice-core and deep-sea sediment-core records over the past million
years show evidence of abrupt changes in climate superimposed on slow
alternations of ice-ages and interglacial warm periods. In general
these abrupt changes are spaced irregularly, but a distinct subset of
recurring cold periods, on the millennial time-scale, appears to be
almost periodic. Such events, however, are not clearly apparent in
ice-core data after the termination of the most recent glaciation,
about eleven thousand years (11 kyr) BP (kyr before A.D. 2000). This
absence of recent events has led to the hypothesis that their
underlying cause is related to internal ice-sheet dynamics (ref. 1,
p. 35).
Interpretations of
sediment-cores by Bond et al. (1, 2) indicate, however, that a 1- to
2-kyr periodicity persisted almost to the present, characterized by
distinct cooling events, including the Little Ice Age that climaxed
near A.D. 1600. Although evidence that cooling was more intense
during glacial times may be explained by some aspect of ice-dynamics,
a continuation of cooling events throughout the postglacial Holocene
era suggests an alternative underlying mechanism.
The 1- to 2-kyr
Ice-Rafted Debris (IRD) Cycle. In a comprehensive comparison of
ice-core and sediment-core data, Bond et al. (1) found persistent
episodic cooling events recorded as increases in the amounts of IRD
in deep sea sediments of the North Atlantic Ocean basin over the past
80 kyr. Consistent periodicity was demonstrated by averaging the
times between inferred cool events over 12-kyr time intervals. This
‘‘pacing’’ of events was found to be restricted to a narrow
range between 1,328 and 1,795 years, with a grand average of 1,476 6
585 yr, that they termed a ‘‘1–2 kyr climate cycle.’’
Similar to these
oceanic cooling events, but less frequent and regular, are Dansgaardy
Oeschger events seen in 18Oy16O data of glacial ice. Although sudden
warming events are more conspicuous, these data also show cooling
events. Bond et al. (1) found that Dansgaardy Oeschger cooling events
coincide with nearly every IRD event during Stage 3 of the last
glaciation when
DansgaardyOeschger events were best developed (ref.
1, p. 51).
They also found that
Heinrich events, massive discharges of icebergs at intervals of 6–9
kyr in the North Atlantic Ocean, were in most cases preceded by IRD
events by 0.5 and 1 kyr (ref. 1,p. 48), suggesting a close link
between the two phenomena.
Bond et al. (1)
proposed ‘‘that the millennial scale climate variability
documented in Greenland ice cores and North Atlantic sediments
through the last glaciation was not forced by ice sheet
instabilities, but instead arose through modulation of a pervasive
1–2 kyr cycle. The persistence of the cycle through
virtually the entire
80 kyr record points to a single forcing mechanism that operated
independently of the glacia linterglacial climate states’’ (ref.
1, p. 55). They did not, however, propose a specific mechanism.
The IRD events
identified by Bond et al. (1, 2) show high spectral power density in
a broad band centered at about 1,800 years (0.55 6 0.15 cyclesykyr).
The authors do not explain why this period is so much larger than the
1,476-year average pacing of cool events, but the time-distribution
of pacing (ref. 1, Fig. 6C; G. Bond, private communication) suggests
that a majority of the events were about 2,000 years apart, with
occasional additional events occurring about half-way between,
evidently too infrequent to cancel out a dominant spectral peak near
1,800 years.
Bond et al. (2) in
addition found a spectral peak near 5,000 years whose possible cause
was also not explained. We now propose an oceanic tidal mechanism
that may explain the basis for both of these spectral peaks,
consistent with the actual times of IRD events.
A Proposed Tidal
Mechanism for Periodic Oceanic Cooling. In a previous study (3) we
proposed a tidal mechanism to explain approximately 6- and 9-year
oscillations in global surface temperature, discernable in
meteorological and oceanographic observations. We first briefly
restate this mechanism.
The reader is referred
to our earlier presentation for more details. We then invoke this
mechanism in an attempt to explain millennial variations in
temperature.
We propose that
variations in the strength of oceanic tides cause periodic cooling of
surface ocean water by modulating the intensity of vertical mixing
that brings to the surface colder water from below. The tides provide
more than half of the total power for vertical mixing, 3.5 terawatts
(4), compared with about 2.0 terawatts from wind drag (3), making
this hypothesis plausible.
Moreover, the tidal
mixing process is strongly nonlinear, so that vertical mixing caused
by tidal forcing must vary in intensity interannually even though the
annual rate of power generation is constant (3). As a consequence,
periodicities in strong forcing, that we will now characterize by
identifying the peak forcing
1 comment:
Scientific research is always good, but spending tens if not hundreds of billions of dollars on research like this, on a subject that we can't do anything about, is way out of proportion to the needs for scientific research on other matters that can and often do have beneficial effects on our life on this planet.
Research on climate change has become nothing more than a big hustle.
The stated Core Principles of the International Climate Science Coalition, offer a sane and rational attitude to this area of scientific inquiry. I've highlighted the ones that I think deserve extra consideration:
CLIMATE SCIENCE
Global climate is always changing in accordance with natural causes and recent changes are not unusual.
Science is rapidly evolving away from the view that humanity's emissions of carbon dioxide and other 'greenhouse gases' are a cause of dangerous climate change.
Climate models used by the IPCC* fail to reproduce known past climates without manipulation and therefore lack the scientific integrity needed for use in climate prediction and related policy decision-making.
The UN IPCC Summary for Policymakers and the assertions of IPCC executives too often seriously mis-represent the conclusions of their own scientific reports.
Claims that ‘consensus’ exists among climate experts regarding the causes of the modest warming of the past century are contradicted by thousands of independent scientists.
Carbon dioxide is not a pollutant - it is a necessary reactant in plant photosynthesis and so is essential for life on Earth.
Research that identifies the Sun as a major driver of global climate change must be taken more seriously.
Global cooling has presented serious problems for human society and the environment throughout history while global warming has generally been highly beneficial.
It is not possible to reliably predict how climate will change in the future, beyond the certainty that multi-decadal warming and cooling trends, and abrupt changes, will all continue, underscoring a need for effective adaptation.
Since science and observation have failed to substantiate the human-caused climate change hypothesis, it is premature to damage national economies with `carbon' taxes, emissions trading or other schemes to control 'greenhouse gas' emissions.
We cannot change the weather, and our governments has no business wasting such huge amounts of OUR money on what is clearly a political exercise.
fs
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