Glacier fluctuations during the past 2000 years

A global compilation of glacier advances and retreats for the past two millennia grouped by 17 regions (excluding Antarctica) highlights the nature of glacier fluctuations during the late Holocene. The dataset includes 275 time series of glacier fluctuations based on historical, tree ring, lake sedi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Solomina, Olga, Bradley, Raymond S., Jomelli, Vincent, Geirsdottird, Aslaug, Kaufman, Darrell S., Koch, Johannes, McKay, Nicholas P., Masiokas, Mariano, Miller, Gifford, Nesje, Atle, Nicolussi, Kurt, Owen, Lewis A., Putnam, Aaron E., Wanner, Heinz, Wiles, Greg, Yang, Bao
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Open Works 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://openworks.wooster.edu/facpub/252
id ftcollegewooster:oai:openworks.wooster.edu:facpub-1268
record_format openpolar
spelling ftcollegewooster:oai:openworks.wooster.edu:facpub-1268 2023-05-15T14:01:25+02:00 Glacier fluctuations during the past 2000 years Solomina, Olga Bradley, Raymond S. Jomelli, Vincent Geirsdottird, Aslaug Kaufman, Darrell S. Koch, Johannes McKay, Nicholas P. Masiokas, Mariano Miller, Gifford Nesje, Atle Nicolussi, Kurt Owen, Lewis A. Putnam, Aaron E. Wanner, Heinz Wiles, Greg Yang, Bao 2016-10-01T07:00:00Z https://openworks.wooster.edu/facpub/252 unknown Open Works https://openworks.wooster.edu/facpub/252 All Faculty Articles Geology text 2016 ftcollegewooster 2022-04-27T05:50:17Z A global compilation of glacier advances and retreats for the past two millennia grouped by 17 regions (excluding Antarctica) highlights the nature of glacier fluctuations during the late Holocene. The dataset includes 275 time series of glacier fluctuations based on historical, tree ring, lake sediment, radiocarbon and terrestrial cosmogenic nuclide data. The most detailed and reliable series for individual glaciers and regional compilations are compared with summer temperature and, when available, winter precipitation reconstructions, the most important parameters for glacier mass balance. In many cases major glacier advances correlate with multi-decadal periods of decreased summer temperature. In a few cases, such as in Arctic Alaska and western Canada, some glacier advances occurred during relatively warm wet times. The timing and scale of glacier fluctuations over the past two millennia varies greatly from region to region. However, the number of glacier advances shows a clear pattern for the high, mid and low latitudes and, hence, points to common forcing factors acting at the global scale. Globally, during the first millennium CE glaciers were smaller than between the advances in 13th to early 20th centuries CE. The precise extent of glacier retreat in the first millennium is not well defined; however, the most conservative estimates indicate that during the 1st and 2nd centuries in some regions glaciers were smaller than at the end of 20th/early 21st centuries. Other periods of glacier retreat are identified regionally during the 5th and 8th centuries in the European Alps, in the 3rd–6th and 9th centuries in Norway, during the 10th–13th centuries in southern Alaska, and in the 18th century in Spitsbergen. However, no single period of common global glacier retreat of centennial duration, except for the past century, has yet been identified. In contrast, the view that the Little Ice Age was a period of global glacier expansion beginning in the 13th century (or earlier) and reaching a maximum in 17th–19th centuries is supported by our data. The pattern of glacier variations in the past two millennia corresponds with cooling in reconstructed temperature records at the continental and hemispheric scales. The number of glacier advances also broadly matches periods showing high volcanic activity and low solar irradiance over the past two millennia, although the resolution of most glacier chronologies is not enough for robust statistical correlations. Glacier retreat in the past 100–150 years corresponds to the anthropogenic global temperature increase. Many questions concerning the relative strength of forcing factors that drove glacier variations in the past 2 ka still remain. Text Antarc* Antarctica Arctic glacier glacier glacier* glaciers Alaska Spitsbergen The College of Wooster: Open Works Arctic Canada Norway
institution Open Polar
collection The College of Wooster: Open Works
op_collection_id ftcollegewooster
language unknown
topic Geology
spellingShingle Geology
Solomina, Olga
Bradley, Raymond S.
Jomelli, Vincent
Geirsdottird, Aslaug
Kaufman, Darrell S.
Koch, Johannes
McKay, Nicholas P.
Masiokas, Mariano
Miller, Gifford
Nesje, Atle
Nicolussi, Kurt
Owen, Lewis A.
Putnam, Aaron E.
Wanner, Heinz
Wiles, Greg
Yang, Bao
Glacier fluctuations during the past 2000 years
topic_facet Geology
description A global compilation of glacier advances and retreats for the past two millennia grouped by 17 regions (excluding Antarctica) highlights the nature of glacier fluctuations during the late Holocene. The dataset includes 275 time series of glacier fluctuations based on historical, tree ring, lake sediment, radiocarbon and terrestrial cosmogenic nuclide data. The most detailed and reliable series for individual glaciers and regional compilations are compared with summer temperature and, when available, winter precipitation reconstructions, the most important parameters for glacier mass balance. In many cases major glacier advances correlate with multi-decadal periods of decreased summer temperature. In a few cases, such as in Arctic Alaska and western Canada, some glacier advances occurred during relatively warm wet times. The timing and scale of glacier fluctuations over the past two millennia varies greatly from region to region. However, the number of glacier advances shows a clear pattern for the high, mid and low latitudes and, hence, points to common forcing factors acting at the global scale. Globally, during the first millennium CE glaciers were smaller than between the advances in 13th to early 20th centuries CE. The precise extent of glacier retreat in the first millennium is not well defined; however, the most conservative estimates indicate that during the 1st and 2nd centuries in some regions glaciers were smaller than at the end of 20th/early 21st centuries. Other periods of glacier retreat are identified regionally during the 5th and 8th centuries in the European Alps, in the 3rd–6th and 9th centuries in Norway, during the 10th–13th centuries in southern Alaska, and in the 18th century in Spitsbergen. However, no single period of common global glacier retreat of centennial duration, except for the past century, has yet been identified. In contrast, the view that the Little Ice Age was a period of global glacier expansion beginning in the 13th century (or earlier) and reaching a maximum in 17th–19th centuries is supported by our data. The pattern of glacier variations in the past two millennia corresponds with cooling in reconstructed temperature records at the continental and hemispheric scales. The number of glacier advances also broadly matches periods showing high volcanic activity and low solar irradiance over the past two millennia, although the resolution of most glacier chronologies is not enough for robust statistical correlations. Glacier retreat in the past 100–150 years corresponds to the anthropogenic global temperature increase. Many questions concerning the relative strength of forcing factors that drove glacier variations in the past 2 ka still remain.
format Text
author Solomina, Olga
Bradley, Raymond S.
Jomelli, Vincent
Geirsdottird, Aslaug
Kaufman, Darrell S.
Koch, Johannes
McKay, Nicholas P.
Masiokas, Mariano
Miller, Gifford
Nesje, Atle
Nicolussi, Kurt
Owen, Lewis A.
Putnam, Aaron E.
Wanner, Heinz
Wiles, Greg
Yang, Bao
author_facet Solomina, Olga
Bradley, Raymond S.
Jomelli, Vincent
Geirsdottird, Aslaug
Kaufman, Darrell S.
Koch, Johannes
McKay, Nicholas P.
Masiokas, Mariano
Miller, Gifford
Nesje, Atle
Nicolussi, Kurt
Owen, Lewis A.
Putnam, Aaron E.
Wanner, Heinz
Wiles, Greg
Yang, Bao
author_sort Solomina, Olga
title Glacier fluctuations during the past 2000 years
title_short Glacier fluctuations during the past 2000 years
title_full Glacier fluctuations during the past 2000 years
title_fullStr Glacier fluctuations during the past 2000 years
title_full_unstemmed Glacier fluctuations during the past 2000 years
title_sort glacier fluctuations during the past 2000 years
publisher Open Works
publishDate 2016
url https://openworks.wooster.edu/facpub/252
geographic Arctic
Canada
Norway
geographic_facet Arctic
Canada
Norway
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
Arctic
glacier
glacier
glacier*
glaciers
Alaska
Spitsbergen
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
Arctic
glacier
glacier
glacier*
glaciers
Alaska
Spitsbergen
op_source All Faculty Articles
op_relation https://openworks.wooster.edu/facpub/252
_version_ 1766271238263537664