On the structure and origin of major glaciation cycles 2. The 100,000‐year cycle
Open Access
- 1 December 1993
- journal article
- regular section
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology
- Vol. 8 (6) , 699-735
- https://doi.org/10.1029/93pa02751
Abstract
Climate over the past million years has been dominated by glaciation cycles with periods near 23,000, 41,000, and 100,000 years. In a linear version of the Milankovitch theory, the two shorter cycles can be explained as responses to insolation cycles driven by precession and obliquity. But the 100,000‐year radiation cycle (arising from eccentricity variation) is much too small in amplitude and too late in phase to produce the corresponding climate cycle by direct forcing. We present phase observations showing that the geographic progression of local responses over the 100,000‐year cycle is similar to the progression in the other two cycles, implying that a similar set of internal climatic mechanisms operates in all three. But the phase sequence in the 100,000‐year cycle requires a source of climatic inertia having a time constant (∼15,000 years) much larger than the other cycles (∼5,000 years). Our conceptual model identifies massive northern hemisphere ice sheets as this larger inertial source. When these ice sheets, forced by precession and obliquity, exceed a critical size, they cease responding as linear Milankovitch slaves and drive atmospheric and oceanic responses that mimic the externally forced responses. In our model, the coupled system acts as a nonlinear amplifier that is particularly sensitive to eccentricity‐driven modulations in the 23,000‐year sea level cycle. During an interval when sea level is forced upward from a major low stand by a Milankovitch response acting either alone or in combination with an internally driven, higher‐frequency process, ice sheets grounded on continental shelves become unstable, mass wasting accelerates, and the resulting deglaciation sets the phase of one wave in the train of 100,000‐year oscillations.Whether a glacier or ice sheet influences the climate depends very much on the scale…. The interesting aspect is that an effect on the local climate can still make an ice mass grow larger and larger, thereby gradually increasing its radius of influence.Johannes Oerlemans [1991, p. 155]Keywords
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