Ice Samples provide Clues to Past, Future
Climate Change
They have also found that
increased levels of dust were being deposited during warmer periods when the
Arctic Oscillation -- changes in the prevailing wind direction centered on the
Atlantic -- was at its strongest.
The scientists carried out their
research by studying two ice-cores collected from ice-caps more than 6000km
apart, one from Greenland, the other from Kamchatka, in eastern Russia. Ice
cores have revolutionized the study of past climates because of the array of
evidence that they preserve, including trapped bubbles of gas such as carbon
dioxide and methane. However this is the first time that scientists have used
organic molecules originating from terrestrial plants, soils and biomass
burning to study past climate change recorded by ice-cores. Deposits can be
dated very accurately by studying the annual layers within the cores -- similar
to tree rings -- which allow scientists to examine deposits going back many
years.
Studying meteorological records
over the last 450 years, the researchers found that the concentrations of the
organic dust were at their highest during periods when the Arctic Oscillation
was stronger.
Dr James Bendle, lead
investigator from the University of Birmingham's School of Geography, Earth and
Environmental Sciences, said: 'We are applying a new type of measurement to ice
cores for the first time, and have successfully obtained information on past
climate change from measurement of organic biomarkers in the cores -- molecules
from plants and soils -- which have been transported thousands of miles by the
wind to the Greenland and Kamchatka ice-caps where the cores are extracted
from. The similarity of the ice core records is remarkable considering the
geographical separation between the two sites. This gives us confidence that
our records represent broad scale changes in the northern Hemisphere and not
just local factors.
'Climate models predict that the
Arctic Oscillation will increasingly move into its positive mode of wetter and
windier weather in the North as a response to increases in greenhouse gases and
global warming. If this is the case, our research suggests that there could be
increased transport of dust and carbonaceous aerosols to the Arctic. As these
organic-rich dusts are dark in colour, they could start to lower the
reflectance of the snow and ice covered surfaces in the Arctic, leading to an
even warmer regional climate.