15 Million-year-old Precedent finds Earth's CO2 Sensitivity to be High
Just How Sensitive Is Earth's Climate to Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide?
Two new studies look far back in geologic time to determine how sensitive the global climate is to atmospheric CO2 levels
Scientific American, Oct. 8, 2009
Carbon
dioxide levels climbing toward a doubling of the 280 parts per million
(ppm) concentration found in the preindustrial atmosphere pose the
question: What impact will this increased greenhouse gas load have on
the climate? If relatively small changes in CO2 levels have
big effects—meaning that we live in a more sensitive climate system—the
planet could warm by as much as 6 degrees Celsius on average with
attendant results such as changed weather patterns and sea-level rise.
A less sensitive climate system would mean average warming of less than
2 degrees C and, therefore, fewer ramifications from global warming.
Human
civilization is now running an experiment (and without a control) that
will definitively determine the answer. Scientists, however, have also
realized that history can be a guide: Two new papers published in Science this week examine the historical record preserved in a stalagmite and microscopic seashells, respectively, to offer some clues.
Earth
scientist Aradhna Tripati of the University of California, Los
Angeles's Department of Earth and Space Sciences and her colleagues
extracted a record of past atmospheric concentrations of CO2
stretching back 20 million years from the shells of tiny creatures
known as foraminifera buried in a column of ocean mud and rock. The
microscopic animals build shells of calcium carbonate out of minerals
in seawater—a process that is affected by the water's relative pH
(acidity), which is, in turn controlled by the level of CO2 in the atmosphere. More CO2 in the atmosphere means a more acidic ocean.
"The two species we picked to analyze [Globigerinoides ruber and G. sacculifer]
are both ones that are around today, and the living animals actually
have photosynthetic algae as symbionts, which means that they live in
the surface ocean, since the algae require sunlight to survive,"
Tripati explains. And that means the fossil record of their shells will
reveal the relative acidity of the surface waters in the ratio of boron
to calcium as well as the specific chemical signature of the boron
itself. "When seawater is more acidic, less boron gets incorporated
into the calcium carbonate shells," she adds.
The researchers first matched this fossil record secured by the
Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Expedition in the western tropical
Pacific to existing records from bubbles trapped in Antarctic ice cores
that stretch back 800,000 years, which preserve a precise record of
past atmospheric composition. Thus reassured of the technique's
accuracy, they plunged back into deep geologic time.
"Modern-day
levels of carbon dioxide were last reached about 15 million years ago,"
Tripati says, when sea levels were at least 25 meters higher and
temperatures were at least 3 degrees C warmer on average. "During the
middle Miocene, an [epoch] in Earth's history when carbon dioxide
levels were sustained at values similar to what they are today [330 to
500 ppm], the planet was much warmer, sea level was higher, there was
substantially less ice at the poles, and the distribution of rainfall
was very different."
Further,
"at no time in the last 20 million years have levels of carbon dioxide
increased as rapidly as at present," Tripati adds; CO2
concentrations have climbed from 280 ppm to 387 ppm in the past 200
years. And "our work indicates that moderate changes in carbon dioxide
levels of 100 to 200 parts per million were associated with major
climate transitions and large changes in temperature"—indicative of a
very sensitive climate.
The rock record reveals that such rainfall changes occur at the same
time as general alterations in the relative strength of sunlight
hitting the planet thanks to periodic shifts in Earth's orbit, known as
Milankovitch cycles. At the same time as the solar heat increases,
according to the monsoon record published in Science, CO2 levels also begin to rise.
"Climate systems are well linked worldwide, such as sea-level, CO2,
ice sheet[s], the Asian monsoon, regional temperature and
precipitation," Cheng says. "So a change in one of them could trigger
changes in others." And that might mean the climate is too sensitive to
tolerate current levels of CO2 without changing the conditions that have allowed human civilization to flourish in the past 10,000 years.