From the mountains of data drawn by analyzing countless ice cores, and a
meticulous review of sometimes obscure historic records, Thompson and
his research team at Ohio State University are convinced that the global
climate has changed dramatically.
But more importantly, they believe it has happened at least once
before, and the results were nearly catastrophic to emerging cultures at
the time. He outlined his interpretations and fears today at the annual
meeting of the American Geophysical Union in San Francisco.
A professor of geological sciences at Ohio State and a researcher
with the Byrd Polar Research Center, Thompson points to markers in
numerous records suggesting that the climate was altered suddenly some
5,200 years ago with severe impacts.
He points to perfectly preserved plants he discovered that recently
emerged from the Quelccaya ice cap in the Peruvian Andes as that glacier
retreats. This monstrous glacier, some 551 feet (168 meters) deep, has
shown an exponentially increasing rate of retreat since his first
observations in 1963.
The plants were carbon-dated to determine their age and tests
indicated they had been buried by the ice for perhaps 5,200 years. That
suggests that somehow, the climate had shifted suddenly and severely to
capture the plants and preserve them until now.
In 1991, hikers found the preserved body of a man trapped in an
Alpine glacier and freed as it retreated. Later tests showed that the
human dubbed Oetzi became trapped and died around 5,200 years ago.
Thompson points to a study of tree rings from Ireland and England
that span a period of 7,000 years. The point in that record when the
tree rings were narrowest suggesting the driest period experienced by
the trees was approximately 5,200 years ago.
He points to ice core records showing the ratio of two oxygen
isotopes retrieved from the ice fields atop Africa's Mount Kilimanjaro. A
proxy for atmospheric temperature at the time snow fell, the records
are at their lowest 5,200 years before now.
He lists the shift by the Sahara Desert from a habitable region to a
barren desert; major changes in plant pollen uncovered from lakebed
cores in South America, and the record lowest levels of methane
retrieved from ice cores from Greenland and Antarctica and all occurred
at the same time 5,200 years ago.
Something happened back at this time and it was monumental,
Thompson said." But it didn't seem monumental to humans then because
there were only approximately 250 million people occupying the planet,
compared to the 6.4 billion we now have."
The evidence clearly points back to this point in history and to
some event that occurred. It also points to similar changes occurring in
today is climate as well, he said.
To me, these are things we really need to be concerned about.
The impact of a climate change of that magnitude on a modern world
would be tremendous, he said. Seventy percent of the population lives in
the world's tropics and major climate changes would directly impact
most of them.
Thompson believes that the 5,200-year old event may have been caused
by a dramatic fluctuation in solar energy reaching the earth.
Scientists know that a historic global cooling called the Little Ice
Age, from 1450 to 1850 A.D., coincided with two periods of decreased
solar activity.
Evidence shows that around 5,200 years ago, solar output first
dropped precipitously and then surged over a short period. It is this
huge solar energy oscillation that Thompson believes may have triggered
the climate change he sees in all those records.
The climate system is remarkably sensitive to natural variability,
he said. "It is likely that it is equally sensitive to effects brought
on by human activity, changes like increased greenhouse gases, altered
land-use policies and fossil-fuel dependence.
Any prudent person would agree that we don't yet understand the
complexities with the climate system and, since we don't, we should be
extremely cautious in how much we tweak the system, he said.
The evidence is clear that a major climate change is underway.
Source: Ohio State University
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