Antarctic ice-sheet expansions in the Middle Miocene and Pliocene

The ice sheet-climate model developed in this study describes the Antarctic ice sheet. It is forced by energy and mass balances and includes oxygen isotopes as a passive tracer.Simulating the Middle Miocene climate transition showed that a decrease in atmospheric CO2, crossing a threshold of about 4...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Langebroek, Petra
Other Authors: Schulz, Michael, Tiedemann, Ralf
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Universität Bremen 2008
Subjects:
CO2
550
Online Access:https://media.suub.uni-bremen.de/handle/elib/2609
https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:gbv:46-diss000112917
Description
Summary:The ice sheet-climate model developed in this study describes the Antarctic ice sheet. It is forced by energy and mass balances and includes oxygen isotopes as a passive tracer.Simulating the Middle Miocene climate transition showed that a decrease in atmospheric CO2, crossing a threshold of about 400 ppm, followed by a minimum in summer insolation, initiated a large-scale ice-sheet expansion.Experiments further confirm the validity of the often applied ratio of a 1 permille increase in oxygen-isotope composition for a global sea-level lowering of 100 m. For the mid-Pliocene, the ice-sheet component was forced by temperatures and accumulation rates from a comprehensive climate model. The closure of the Panamanian gateway in the mid-Pliocene was found to induce an intensification of the meridional circulation with a cooling over Antarctica as result. In turn, this cooling forced the Antarctic ice-sheet to expand. From the examples discussed in this study it can be concluded that changes in temperature, due to atmospheric CO2 as well as due to tectonic forcing, have a large impact on the extent of the Antarctic ice sheet.