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OKIsItJustMe

(19,938 posts)
Mon Oct 15, 2012, 02:48 PM Oct 2012

The circulation of the Atlantic Ocean was faster during the last Ice Age than today

http://www.uni-heidelberg.de/presse/news2012/pm20121015_klimawandel_en.html
[font face=Serif][font size=5]Climate Change: The Past of the Atlantic Heat Pump[/font]

15 October 2012 – No. 228/2012

[font size=4]The circulation of the Atlantic Ocean was faster during the last Ice Age than today[/font]


[font size=1]Picture: Brisbane, CC BY-SA 3.0
Simplified concept of the Ocean Circulation: Warm and saline surface waters (red) transport heat from the Southern Hemisphere to the North Atlantic. Due to cooling these waters gain in density, sink into the deeper Ocean and flow back southward (blue). In a slow diffusive process the deep waters upwell again in the Indian and the Pacific Ocean closing the circle of the wind, salt and heat driven "global conveyor belt". The new study concludes that during the Last Glacial the strength of circulation in the North Atlantic was more intensive than nowadays although it did not reach as far as north as today.[/font]


[font size=3]Heat transport in the Atlantic Ocean during the last Ice Age was not weaker, as long assumed, but in fact stronger than it is today. This discovery was made by an international research team led by environmental physicists at Heidelberg University. The scientists used ultra-precise measurements of natural radionuclides in ocean sediments to study the ocean’s strength of circulation and uncovered new information about the past of the “Atlantic heat pump”. The results of their research, which are also significant for correctly predicting climate models, were published in the journal “Nature Geoscience”.

“Thanks to the Gulf Stream and its northern branches, it is much warmer here than at the same latitudes in North America. Without the ocean’s heat transport, which is comparable to that of a million large power plants, temperatures in Northern and Western Europe would be considerably cooler”, explained Dr. Jörg Lippold, lead author of the study from Heidelberg University‘s Institute of Environmental Physics. Europe’s heating system originates in the Gulf of Mexico, where the waters of the ocean warm and flow northeast due to wind and the Earth’s rotation. The water at the surface cools in the process, growing denser, and then sinks in the North Atlantic, where it flows south again in the Ocean’s depths.

“Using two exotic representatives of the periodic table from core samples of Atlantic deep sea sediment, we were able to quantitatively determine this return flow for the first time”, said the Heidelberg researcher. The two isotopes studied, protactinium-231 and thorium-230, are produced from the radioactive decay of uranium found naturally in sea water. While thorium is deposited directly in the sediment at the Ocean’s floor, the protactinium follows the circulation and is carried by the deep sea current from the North Atlantic. The proportion of the two elements in the sediment ergo reflects the strength of the circulation. Around the time of the largest global ice coverage approximately 20,000 years ago, less proctactinium-231 was measured. According to Dr. Lippold, this points to an increase in the Atlantic circulation, which is also supported by model calculations.

Knowing that the Atlantic circulated faster during the Ice Age is important for models used to calculate the future of the world’s climate. The accuracy of the predictions of climate models is assessed in particular by whether they correctly reflect the climate in the past. “The oceans are the key to the Earth’s climate system. There is approximately 50 times more CO2 bound in the Earth’s Oceans than in the atmosphere, with 1,000 times more heat storage capacity“, said Dr. Lippold. “With the Ocean circulating more quickly then, it could also extract and store more CO2 from the atmosphere.”

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ngeo1608
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The circulation of the Atlantic Ocean was faster during the last Ice Age than today (Original Post) OKIsItJustMe Oct 2012 OP
I shall K you and R you phantom power Oct 2012 #1
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