For years, scientists have thought
that a continental ice sheet formed during the Late Cretaceous Period
more than 90 million years ago when the climate was much warmer than it
is today. Now, a University of Missouri researcher has found evidence
suggesting that no ice sheet formed at this time. This finding could
help environmentalists and scientists predict what the earth's climate
will be as carbon dioxide levels continue to rise.
"Currently, carbon dioxide levels
are just above 400 parts per million (ppm), up approximately 120 ppm in
the last 150 years and rising about 2 ppm each year," said Ken MacLeod, a
professor of geological sciences at MU. "In our study, we found that
during the Late Cretaceous Period, when carbon dioxide levels were
around 1,000 ppm, there were no continental ice sheets on earth. So, if
carbon dioxide levels continue to rise, the earth will be ice-free once
the climate comes into balance with the higher levels."
In his study, MacLeod analyzed the
fossilized shells of 90 million-year-old planktic and benthic
foraminifera, single-celled organisms about the size of a grain of salt.
Measuring the ratios of different isotopes of oxygen and carbon in the
fossils gives scientists information about past temperatures and other
environmental conditions. The fossils, which were found in Tanzania,
showed no evidence of cooling or changes in local water chemistry that
would have been expected if a glacial event had occurred during that
time period.
"We know that the carbon dioxide
(CO2) levels are rising currently and are at the highest they have been
in millions of years. We have records of how conditions have changed as
CO2 levels have risen from 280 to 400 ppm, but I believe it also is
important to know what could happen when those levels reach 600 to 1000
ppm," MacLeod said. "At the rate that carbon dioxide levels are rising,
we will reach 600 ppm around the end of this century. At that level of
CO2, will ice sheets on Greenland and Antarctica be stable? If not, how
will their melting affect the planet?"
Previously, many scientists have
thought that doubling CO2 levels would cause earth's temperature to
increase as much as 3 degrees Celsius, or approximately 6 degrees
Fahrenheit. However, the temperatures MacLeod believes existed in
Tanzania 90 million years ago are more consistent with predictions that a
doubling of CO2 levels would cause the earth's temperature could rise
an average of 6 degrees Celsius, or approximately 11 degrees Fahrenheit.
"While studying the past can help us
predict the future, other challenges with modern warming still exist,"
MacLeod said. "The Late Cretaceous climate was very warm, but the earth
adjusted as changes occurred over millions of years. We're seeing the
same size changes, but they are happening over a couple of hundred
years, maybe 10,000 times faster. How that affects the equation is a big
and difficult question."
No comments:
Post a Comment