The 100,000-Year Ice-Age Cycle Identified and Found to Lag Temperature, Carbon Dioxide, and Orbital Eccentricity

The deep-sea sediment oxygen isotopic composition (δ 18 O) record is dominated by a 100,000-year cyclicity that is universally interpreted as the main ice-age rhythm. Here, the ice volume component of this δ 18 O signal was extracted by using the record of δ 18 O in atmospheric oxygen trapped in Ant...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Science
Main Author: Shackleton, Nicholas J.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) 2000
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.289.5486.1897
https://www.science.org/doi/pdf/10.1126/science.289.5486.1897
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Summary:The deep-sea sediment oxygen isotopic composition (δ 18 O) record is dominated by a 100,000-year cyclicity that is universally interpreted as the main ice-age rhythm. Here, the ice volume component of this δ 18 O signal was extracted by using the record of δ 18 O in atmospheric oxygen trapped in Antarctic ice at Vostok, precisely orbitally tuned. The benthic marine δ 18 O record is heavily contaminated by the effect of deep-water temperature variability, but by using the Vostok record, the δ 18 O signals of ice volume, deep-water temperature, and additional processes affecting air δ 18 O (that is, a varying Dole effect) were separated. At the 100,000-year period, atmospheric carbon dioxide, Vostok air temperature, and deep-water temperature are in phase with orbital eccentricity, whereas ice volume lags these three variables. Hence, the 100,000-year cycle does not arise from ice sheet dynamics; instead, it is probably the response of the global carbon cycle that generates the eccentricity signal by causing changes in atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration.