Did the influx of
freshwater 8,200 years ago from large lakes in what is now northern Canada help
trigger the coldest climate event in the Earth's climate system in the past
10,000 years? That such a cold event occurred is well documented by
Baldini
(2002) and others, including
Von Grafenstein
(1998),
whose data in the figure to the left shows snow accumulation and isotopically
inferred temperature records from the Greenland GISP2 ice core and fossil shells
in the sediments of Lake Ammersee, southern Germany.
One theory put forth
by Barber,
et. al.(1999) as to what triggered this 400 year period of cooling is that
two gigantic glacial lakes in Canada's Hudson Bay region some 8,200 years ago
broke open when an ice dam from a remnant of the Laurentide Ice Sheet collapsed.
The flow of lake water rushing through the Hudson Strait and into the Labrador
Sea is estimated to be about 15 times greater than the current discharge of the
Amazon River. Also see
Abrupt Climate Change.
Another climate mystery that scientists have puzzled over in recent years is
why during the the"middle Holocene" (roughly 7,000 to 5,000 years ago),
temperatures seemed to be warmer than even present day temperatures. Indeed,
some of the paleoclimatic data suggest that temperatures were several degrees
Celsius hotter than today. With the growing concern about the potential for
global warming,
such information is of great interest to climate scientists.
It now appears that temperatures were generally warmer, but only in the summer
in the northern hemisphere. The cause? Changes in the Earth's orbit that operate
slowly over thousands and millions of years that change the amount of solar
radiation reaching each latitudinal band of the Earth during each month. (See
The Ice
Age online slide set and
Climate Science
100,000 Years for more on orbital forcing.) Such orbital changes can be
calculated, and what they indicate is that the northern hemisphere should have
been warmer in the summer and colder in the winter than at present during the
mid-Holocene.
Information obtained from: http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/paleo/ctl/clisci10k.html