fbpx
Wikipedia

Greenhouse and icehouse Earth

Throughout Earth's climate history (Paleoclimate) its climate has fluctuated between two primary states: greenhouse and icehouse Earth.[1] Both climate states last for millions of years and should not be confused with glacial and interglacial periods, which occur as alternate phases within an icehouse period and tend to last less than 1 million years.[2] There are five known Icehouse periods in Earth's climate history, which are known as the Huronian, Cryogenian, Andean-Saharan, Late Paleozoic, and Late Cenozoic glaciations.[1] The main factors involved in changes of the paleoclimate are believed to be the concentration of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2), changes in Earth's orbit, long-term changes in the solar constant, and oceanic and orogenic changes from tectonic plate dynamics.[3] Greenhouse and icehouse periods have played key roles in the evolution of life on Earth by directly and indirectly forcing biotic adaptation and turnover at various spatial scales across time.[4][5]

Timeline of the five known great glaciations, shown in blue. The periods in between depict greenhouse conditions.

Greenhouse Earth

 
An illustration of ice age Earth at its glacial maximum.

A "greenhouse Earth" is a period during which no continental glaciers exist anywhere on the planet.[6] Additionally, the levels of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases (such as water vapor and methane) are high, and sea surface temperatures (SSTs) range from 28 °C (82.4 °F) in the tropics to 0 °C (32 °F) in the polar regions.[7] Earth has been in a greenhouse state for about 85% of its history.[6]

The state should not be confused with a hypothetical runaway greenhouse effect, which is an irreversible tipping point that corresponds to the ongoing runaway greenhouse effect on Venus.[8] The IPCC states that "a 'runaway greenhouse effect'—analogous to [that of] Venus—appears to have virtually no chance of being induced by anthropogenic activities."[9]

Causes

There are several theories as to how a greenhouse Earth can come about. Geologic climate proxies indicate that there is a strong correlation between a greenhouse state and high CO2 levels.[1] However, it is important to recognize that high CO2 levels are interpreted as an indicator of Earth's climate, rather than as an independent driver. Other phenomena have instead likely played a key role in influencing global climate by altering oceanic and atmospheric currents[10] and increasing the net amount of solar radiation absorbed by Earth's atmosphere.[11] Such phenomena may include but are not limited to tectonic shifts that result in the release of greenhouse gases (such as CO2 and CH4) via volcanic activity,[12] Volcanoes emit massive amounts of CO2 and methane into the atmosphere when they are active, which can trap enough heat to cause a greenhouse effect. On Earth, atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4) are higher, trapping solar energy in the atmosphere via the greenhouse effect. Methane, the main component of natural gas, is responsible for more than a quarter of the current global warming. It's a formidable pollutant with an 80-fold higher global warming potential than CO2 in the 20 years after it's been introduced into the atmosphere. An increase in the solar constant increases the net amount of solar energy absorbed into Earth's atmosphere,[11] and changes in Earth's obliquity and eccentricity increase the net amount of solar radiation absorbed into Earth's atmosphere.[11]

Icehouse Earth

Earth is now in an icehouse state, and ice sheets are present in both poles simultaneously.[6] Climatic proxies indicate that greenhouse gas concentrations tend to lower during an icehouse Earth.[13] Similarly, global temperatures are also lower under Icehouse conditions.[14] Earth then fluctuates between glacial and interglacial periods, and the size and the distribution of continental ice sheets fluctuate dramatically.[15] The fluctuation of the ice sheets results in changes in regional climatic conditions that affect the range and the distribution of many terrestrial and oceanic species.[4][5][16] On scales ranging from thousands to hundreds of millions of years, the Earth's climate has transitioned from warm to chilly intervals within life-sustaining ranges. There have been three periods of glaciation in the Phanerozoic Eon (Ordovician, Carboniferous, and Cenozoic), each lasting tens of millions of years and bringing ice down to sea level at mid-latitudes. During these frigid "icehouse" intervals, sea levels were generally lower, CO2 levels in the atmosphere were lower, net photosynthesis and carbon burial were lower, and oceanic volcanism was lower than during the alternate "greenhouse" intervals. Transitions from Phanerozoic icehouse to greenhouse intervals coincided with biotic crises or catastrophic extinction events, indicating complicated biosphere-hydrosphere feedbacks. [39]

The glacial and interglacial periods tend to alternate in accordance with solar and climatic oscillation until Earth eventually returns to a greenhouse state.[15]

Earth's current icehouse state is known as the Quaternary Ice Age and began approximately 2.58 million years ago.[17] However, an ice sheet has existed in Antarctic for approximately 34 million years.[17] Earth is now in a clement interglacial period that started approximately 11,800 years ago.[17] Earth will likely phase into another interglacial period such as the Eemian, which occurred between 130,000 and 115,000 years ago, during which evidence of forest in North Cape, Norway, and hippopotamus in the Rhine and Thames Rivers can be observed.[16] Earth is expected to continue to transition between glacial and interglacial periods until the cessation of the Quaternary Ice Age and will then enter another greenhouse state.

Causes

It is well established that there is strong correlation between low CO2 levels and an icehouse state.[18] However, that does not mean that decreasing atmospheric levels CO2 is a primary driver of a transition to the icehouse state.[11][18] Rather, it may be an indicator of other solar, geologic, and atmospheric processes at work.[18][10][11]

Potential drivers of previous icehouse states include the movement of the tectonic plates and the opening and the closing of oceanic gateways.[19] They seem to play a crucial part in driving Earth into an icehouse state, as tectonic shifts result in the transportation of cool, deep water, which circulates to the ocean surface and assists in ice sheet development at the poles.[7] Examples of oceanic current shifts as a result of tectonic plate dynamics include the opening of the Tasmanian Gateway 36.5 million years ago, which separated Australia and Antarctica,[20][21] and the opening of the Drake Passage 32.8 million years ago by the separation of South America and Antarctica,[21] both of which are believed to have allowed for the development of the Antarctic ice sheet. The closing of the Isthmus of Panama and of the Indonesian seaway approximately 3 to 4 million years ago may also be a contributor to Earth's current icehouse state.[22] One proposed driver of the Ordovician Ice Age was the evolution of land plants. Under that paradigm, the rapid increase in photosynthetic biomass gradually removed CO2 from the atmosphere and replaced it with increasing levels of O2, which induced global cooling.[23] One proposed driver of the Quaternary Ice age is the collision of the Indian Subcontinent with Eurasia to form the Himalayas and the Tibetan Plateau.[17] Under that paradigm, the resulting continental uplift revealed massive quantities of unweathered silicate rock CaSiO
3
, which reacted with CO2 to produce CaCO
3
(lime) and SiO
2
(silica). The CaCO
3
was eventually transported to the ocean and taken up by plankton, which then died and sank to the bottom of the ocean, which effectively removed CO2 from the atmosphere.[17]

Glacials and interglacials

Within icehouse states are "glacial" and "interglacial" periods that cause ice sheets to build up or to retreat. The main causes for glacial and interglacial periods are variations in the movement of Earth around the Sun.[24] The astronomical components, discovered by the Serbian geophysicist Milutin Milanković and now known as Milankovitch cycles, include the axial tilt of Earth, the orbital eccentricity (or shape of the orbit), and the precession (or wobble) of Earth's rotation. The tilt of the axis tends to fluctuate from 21.5° to 24.5° and back every 41,000 years on the vertical axis. The change actually affects the seasonality on Earth since a change in solar radiation hits certain areas of the planet more often on a higher tilt, and a lower tilt creates a more even set of seasons worldwide. The changes can be seen in ice cores, which also contain evidence that during glacial times (at the maximum extension of the ice sheets), the atmosphere had lower levels of carbon dioxide. That may be caused by the increase or the redistribution of the acid-base balance with bicarbonate and carbonate ions that deals with alkalinity. During an icehouse period, only 20% of the time is spent in interglacial, or warmer times.[24] Model simulations suggest that the current interglacial climate state will continue for at least another 100,000 years because of CO2 emissions, including the complete deglaciation of the Northern Hemisphere.[25]

Snowball Earth

A "snowball Earth" is the complete opposite of greenhouse Earth in which Earth's surface is completely frozen over. However, a snowball Earth technically does not have continental ice sheets like during the icehouse state. "The Great Infra-Cambrian Ice Age" has been claimed to be the host of such a world, and in 1964, the scientist W. Brian Harland brought forth his discovery of indications of glaciers in the low latitudes (Harland and Rudwick). That became a problem for Harland because of the thought of the "Runaway Snowball Paradox" (a kind of Snowball effect) that once Earth enters the route of becoming a snowball Earth, it would never be able to leave that state. However, Joseph Kirschvink [de] brought up a solution to the paradox in 1992. Since the continents were then huddled at the low and the middle latitudes, there was less ocean water available to absorb the higher amount solar energy hitting the tropics, and there was also an increase in rainfall because more land exposed to higher solar energy might have caused chemical weathering, which would contribute to removal of CO2 from the atmosphere. Both conditions might have caused a substantial drop in CO2 atmospheric levels which resulted in cooling temperatures and increasing ice albedo (ice reflectivity of incoming solar radiation), which would further increase global cooling (a positive feedback). That might have been the mechanism of entering Snowball Earth state. Kirschvink explained that the way to get out of Snowball Earth state could be connected again to carbon dioxide. A possible explanation is that during Snowball Earth, volcanic activity would not halt but accumulate atmospheric CO2. At the same time, global ice cover would prevent chemical weathering (particularly hydrolysis), responsible for removal of CO2 from the atmosphere. CO2 therefore accumulated in the atmosphere. Once the atmosphere accumulation of CO2 reached a threshold, temperature would rise enough for ice sheets to start melting. That would in turn reduce the ice albedo effect, which would in turn further reduce the ice cover and allow an exit from Snowball Earth. At the end of Snowball Earth, before the equilibrium "thermostat" between volcanic activity and the by then slowly resuming chemical weathering was reinstated, CO2 in the atmosphere had accumulated enough to cause temperatures to peak to as much as 60 °C before they eventually settled down. Around the same geologic period of Snowball Earth (it is debated if it was the cause or the result of Snowball Earth), the Great Oxygenation Event (GOE) was occurring. The event known as the Cambrian Explosion followed and produced the beginnings of populous bilateral organisms, as well as a greater diversity and mobility in multicellular life.[26] However, some biologists claim that a complete snowball Earth could not have happened since photosynthetic life would not have survived under many meters of ice without sunlight. However, sunlight has been observed to penetrate meters of ice in Antarctica[citation needed]. Most scientists[citation needed] now believe that a "hard" Snowball Earth, one completely covered by ice, is probably impossible. However, a "slushball Earth," with points of opening near the equator, is considered to be possible.

Recent studies may have again complicated the idea of a snowball Earth. In October 2011, a team of French researchers announced that the carbon dioxide during the last speculated "snowball Earth" may have been lower than originally stated, which provides a challenge in finding out how Earth got out of its state and whether a snowball or a slushball Earth occurred.[27]

Transitions

Causes

The Eocene, which occurred between 53 and 49 million years ago, was Earth's warmest temperature period for 100 million years.[28] However, the "super-greenhouse" period had eventually become an icehouse period by the late Eocene. It is believed that the decline of CO2 caused the change, but mechanisms of positive feedback may have contributed to the cooling.

The best available record for a transition from an icehouse to greenhouse period in which plant life existed is for the Permian period, which occurred around 300 million years ago. A major transition took place 40 million years ago and caused Earth to change from a moist, icy planet in which rainforests covered the tropics to a hot, dry, and windy location in which little could survive. Professor Isabel P. Montañez of University of California, Davis, who has researched the time period, found the climate to be "highly unstable" and to be "marked by dips and rises in carbon dioxide."[29]

Impacts

The Eocene-Oligocene transition was the latest and occurred approximately 34 million years ago. It resulted in a rapid global cooling, the glaciation of Antarctica, and a series of biotic extinction events. The most dramatic species turnover event associated with the time period is the Grande Coupure, a period that saw the replacement of European tree-dwelling and leaf-eating mammal species by migratory species from Asia.[30]

Research

Paleoclimatology is a branch of science that attempts to understand the history of greenhouse and icehouse conditions over geological time. The study of ice cores, dendrochronology, ocean and lake sediments (varve), palynology, (paleobotany), isotope analysis (such as radiometric dating and stable isotope analysis), and other climate proxies allows scientists to create models of Earth's past energy budgets and the resulting climate. One study has shown that atmospheric carbon dioxide levels during the Permian age rocked back and forth between 250 parts per million, which is close to today's levels, up to 2,000 parts per million.[29] Studies on lake sediments suggest that the "hothouse" or "super-greenhouse" Eocene was in a "permanent El Nino state" after the 10 °C warming of the deep ocean and high latitude surface temperatures shut down the Pacific Ocean's El Nino-Southern Oscillation.[31] A theory was suggested for the Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum on the sudden decrease of the carbon isotopic composition of the global inorganic carbon pool by 2.5 parts per million.[32] A hypothesis posed for this drop of isotopes was the increase of methane hydrates, the trigger for which remains a mystery. The increase of atmospheric methane, which happens to be a potent but short-lived greenhouse gas, increased the global temperatures by 6 °C with the assistance of the less potent carbon dioxide.[citation needed]

List of icehouse and greenhouse periods

  • A greenhouse period ran from 4.6 to 2.4 billion years ago.
  • Huronian Glaciation – an icehouse period that ran from 2.4 billion to 2.1 billion years ago
  • A greenhouse period ran from 2.1 billion to 720 million years ago.
  • Cryogenian – an icehouse period that ran from 720 to 635 million years ago during which the entire Earth was at times frozen over
  • A greenhouse period ran from 635 million years ago to 450 million years ago.
  • Andean-Saharan glaciation – an icehouse period that ran from 450 million to 420 million years ago
  • A greenhouse period ran from 420 million years ago to 360 million years ago.
  • Late Paleozoic Ice Age – an icehouse period that ran from 360 million to 260 million years ago
  • A greenhouse period ran from 260 million years ago to 33.9 million years ago.
  • Late Cenozoic Ice Age – the current icehouse period, which began 33.9 million years ago

Modern conditions

Currently, Earth is in an icehouse climate state. About 34 million years ago, ice sheets began to form in Antarctica; the ice sheets in the Arctic did not start forming until 2 million years ago.[33] Some processes that may have led to the current icehouse may be connected to the development of the Himalayan Mountains and the opening of the Drake Passage between South America and Antarctica, but climate model simulations suggest that the early opening of the Drake Passage played only a limited role, and the later constriction of the Tethys and Central American Seaways is more important in explaining the observed Cenozoic cooling.[34] Scientists have tried to compare the past transitions between icehouse and greenhouse, and vice versa, to understand what type of climate state Earth will have next.

Without the human influence on the greenhouse gas concentration, a glacial period would be the next climate state. Predicted changes in orbital forcing suggest that in absence of human-made global warming, the next glacial period would begin at least 50,000 years from now[35] (see Milankovitch cycles), but the ongoing anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions mean the next climate state will be a greenhouse Earth period.[33] Permanent ice is actually a rare phenomenon in the history of Earth and occurs only in coincidence with the icehouse effect, which has affected about 20% of Earth's history.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Summerhayes, Colin P.. (8 September 2020). Palaeoclimatology : from snowball earth to the anthropocene. ISBN 978-1-119-59138-2. OCLC 1236201953. from the original on 18 April 2021. Retrieved 17 April 2021.
  2. ^ Paillard, D. (2006-07-28). "ATMOSPHERE: What Drives the Ice Age Cycle?". Science. 313 (5786): 455–456. doi:10.1126/science.1131297. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 16873636. S2CID 128379788. from the original on 2021-11-21. Retrieved 2021-04-17.
  3. ^ P., Summerhayes, C. (13 July 2015). Earths evolving climate : a geological perspective. ISBN 978-1-118-89737-9. OCLC 907811494. from the original on 21 November 2021. Retrieved 17 April 2021.
  4. ^ a b Godfrey, Laurie R.; Samonds, Karen E.; Baldwin, Justin W.; Sutherland, Michael R.; Kamilar, Jason M.; Allfisher, Kristen L. (2020-08-08). "Mid-Cenozoic climate change, extinction, and faunal turnover in Madagascar, and their bearing on the evolution of lemurs". BMC Evolutionary Biology. 20 (1): 97. doi:10.1186/s12862-020-01628-1. ISSN 1471-2148. PMC 7414565. PMID 32770933.
  5. ^ a b Nge, Francis J.; Biffin, Ed; Thiele, Kevin R.; Waycott, Michelle (2020-01-22). "Extinction pulse at Eocene–Oligocene boundary drives diversification dynamics of two Australian temperate floras". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 287 (1919): 20192546. doi:10.1098/rspb.2019.2546. ISSN 0962-8452. PMC 7015341. PMID 31964242.
  6. ^ a b c Understanding Earth's Deep Past. 2011-08-02. doi:10.17226/13111. ISBN 978-0-309-20915-1. from the original on 2021-11-21. Retrieved 2021-04-17.
  7. ^ a b Stella., Woodard (2012). Oceanic and atmospheric response to climate change over varying geologic timescales. [Texas A & M University]. OCLC 805585971. from the original on 2021-04-18. Retrieved 2021-04-17.
  8. ^ Steffen, Will; Rockström, Johan; Richardson, Katherine; Lenton, Timothy M.; Folke, Carl; Liverman, Diana; Summerhayes, Colin P.; Barnosky, Anthony D.; Cornell, Sarah E.; Crucifix, Michel; Donges, Jonathan F.; Fetzer, Ingo; Lade, Steven J.; Scheffer, Marten; Winkelmann, Ricarda; Schellnhuber, Hans Joachim (2018-08-06). "Trajectories of the Earth System in the Anthropocene". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 115 (33): 8252–8259. Bibcode:2018PNAS..115.8252S. doi:10.1073/pnas.1810141115. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 6099852. PMID 30082409.
  9. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-11-09. Retrieved 2018-11-02.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  10. ^ a b Young, Grant M. (March 2019). "Aspects of the Archean-Proterozoic transition: How the great Huronian Glacial Event was initiated by rift-related uplift and terminated at the rift-drift transition during break-up of Lauroscandia". Earth-Science Reviews. 190: 171–189. Bibcode:2019ESRv..190..171Y. doi:10.1016/j.earscirev.2018.12.013. ISSN 0012-8252. S2CID 134347305. from the original on 2021-11-21. Retrieved 2021-04-17.
  11. ^ a b c d e Haigh, Joanna D.; Cargill, Peter (2015-06-23). The Sun's Influence on Climate. Princeton University Press. doi:10.23943/princeton/9780691153834.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-691-15383-4. from the original on 2021-11-21. Retrieved 2021-04-17.
  12. ^ Schmidt, Anja; Fristad, Kirsten E.; Elkins-Tanton, Linda T., eds. (2015). Volcanism and Global Environmental Change. Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/cbo9781107415683. ISBN 9781107415683. from the original on 2021-11-21. Retrieved 2021-04-17.
  13. ^ "Review of "Global mean surface temperature and climate sensitivity of the EECO, PETM and latest Paleocene"". 2020-02-14. doi:10.5194/cp-2019-167-rc1. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  14. ^ Zhang, Laiming (2019). "The evolution of latitudinal temperature gradients from the latest Cretaceous through the Present". Earth-Science Reviews. 189: 147–158. Bibcode:2019ESRv..189..147Z. doi:10.1016/j.earscirev.2019.01.025. S2CID 134433505. from the original on 2021-11-21. Retrieved 2021-04-17 – via Science Direct.
  15. ^ a b Summerhayes, C. P. (2020). Palaeoclimatology : from snowball earth to the anthropocene. Chichester, West Sussex. ISBN 978-1-119-59138-2. OCLC 1145913723. from the original on 2021-11-21. Retrieved 2021-04-17.
  16. ^ a b van Kolfschoten, Th. (August 2000). "The Eemian mammal fauna of central Europe". Netherlands Journal of Geosciences. 79 (2–3): 269–281. doi:10.1017/s0016774600021752. ISSN 0016-7746.
  17. ^ a b c d e Rose, James (January 2010). "Quaternary climates: a perspective for global warming". Proceedings of the Geologists' Association. 121 (3): 334–341. doi:10.1016/j.pgeola.2010.07.001. ISSN 0016-7878. from the original on 2021-11-21. Retrieved 2021-04-17.
  18. ^ a b c Woodard, S. C., & Thomas, D. J. (2012). Oceanic and atmospheric response to climate change over varying geologic timescales. by Stella C. Woodard. [Texas A&M University].
  19. ^ SMITH, ALAN G.; PICKERING, KEVIN T. (May 2003). "Oceanic gateways as a critical factor to initiate icehouse Earth". Journal of the Geological Society. 160 (3): 337–340. Bibcode:2003JGSoc.160..337S. doi:10.1144/0016-764902-115. ISSN 0016-7649. S2CID 127653725. from the original on 2007-11-30. Retrieved 2021-04-17.
  20. ^ The Tasmanian Gateway Between Australia and Antarctica: Paleoclimate and Paleoceanography. ODP Preliminary Report. Vol. 189. Ocean Drilling Program. June 2000. doi:10.2973/odp.pr.189.2000. from the original on 2021-11-21. Retrieved 2021-04-17.
  21. ^ a b Stant, S.A.; Lara, J.; McGonigal, K.L.; Ladner, B.C. (2004-04-22), "Quaternary Nannofossil Biostratigraphy from Ocean Drilling Program Leg 189, Tasmanian Gateway", Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, 189 Scientific Results, Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Ocean Drilling Program, vol. 189, doi:10.2973/odp.proc.sr.189.109.2004, from the original on 2021-11-21, retrieved 2021-04-15
  22. ^ Smith, Alan G.; Kevin T. Pickering (2003). "Oceanic gateways as a critical factor to initiate icehouse Earth". Journal of the Geological Society. 160 (3): 337–340. Bibcode:2003JGSoc.160..337S. doi:10.1144/0016-764902-115. S2CID 127653725.
  23. ^ Lenton, Timothy M.; Crouch, Michael; Johnson, Martin; Pires, Nuno; Dolan, Liam (February 2012). "First plants cooled the Ordovician". Nature Geoscience. 5 (2): 86–89. Bibcode:2012NatGe...5...86L. doi:10.1038/ngeo1390. ISSN 1752-0894. from the original on 2021-03-20. Retrieved 2021-04-17.
  24. ^ a b Broecker, Wallace S.; George H. Denton (January 1990). "What Drives Glacial Cycles". Scientific American. 262: 49–56. Bibcode:1990SciAm.262a..49B. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0190-48.
  25. ^ A. Ganopolski; R. Winkelmann; H. J. Schellnhuber (2016). "Critical insolation–CO2 relation for diagnosing past and future glacial inception". Nature. 529 (7585): 200–203. Bibcode:2016Natur.529..200G. doi:10.1038/nature16494. PMID 26762457. S2CID 4466220.
  26. ^ Maruyama, S.; M. Santosh (2008). "Models on Snowball Earth and Cambrian explosion: A synopsis". Gondwana Research. 14 (1–2): 22–32. Bibcode:2008GondR..14...22M. doi:10.1016/j.gr.2008.01.004.
  27. ^ CNRS, Delegation Paris Michel-Ange. "Snowball Earth's hypothesis challenged". ScienceDaily. from the original on 19 October 2011. Retrieved 24 November 2011.
  28. ^ Herath, Anuradha K. "From Greenhouse to icehouse". Astrobio. from the original on 14 October 2011. Retrieved 28 October 2011.
  29. ^ a b University of California-Davis. "A Bumpy Shift from Ice House to Greenhouse". ScienceDaily. from the original on 10 June 2013. Retrieved 4 November 2011.
  30. ^ Prothero, D. R. (1994-01-01). "The Late Eocene-Oligocene Extinctions" (PDF). Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences. 22 (1): 145–165. Bibcode:1994AREPS..22..145P. doi:10.1146/annurev.ea.22.050194.001045.
  31. ^ Huber, Matthew; Rodrigo Caballero (7 February 2003). "Eocene El Nino: Evidence for Robust Tropical Dynamics in the "Hothouse"". Science. 299 (5608): 877–881. Bibcode:2003Sci...299..877H. doi:10.1126/science.1078766. PMID 12574626. S2CID 19838005.
  32. ^ Higgins, John A.; Daniel P. Schrag (2006). "Beyond Methane: Towards a theory for the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum". Earth and Planetary Science Letters. 245 (3–4): 523–537. Bibcode:2006E&PSL.245..523H. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2006.03.009.
  33. ^ a b Montanez, Isabel; G.S. Soreghan (March 2006). "Earth's Fickle Climate: Lessons Learned from Deep-Time Ice Ages". Geotimes. 51: 24–27.
  34. ^ "Zhang, Zhongshi & Nisancioglu, Kerim & Flatøy, F. & Bentsen, M. & Bethke, I. & Wang, H.. (2009). Did the opening of the Drake Passage play a significant role in Cenozoic cooling?". from the original on 2021-11-21. Retrieved 2020-09-14.
  35. ^ Berger A, Loutre MF (August 2002). "Climate. An exceptionally long interglacial ahead?". Science. 297 (5585): 1287–8. doi:10.1126/science.1076120. PMID 12193773. S2CID 128923481.

greenhouse, icehouse, earth, climate, state, redirects, here, different, levels, climate, climate, change, equilibrium, climate, sensitivity, throughout, earth, climate, history, paleoclimate, climate, fluctuated, between, primary, states, greenhouse, icehouse. Climate state redirects here For the different levels of climate due to climate change see Equilibrium climate sensitivity Throughout Earth s climate history Paleoclimate its climate has fluctuated between two primary states greenhouse and icehouse Earth 1 Both climate states last for millions of years and should not be confused with glacial and interglacial periods which occur as alternate phases within an icehouse period and tend to last less than 1 million years 2 There are five known Icehouse periods in Earth s climate history which are known as the Huronian Cryogenian Andean Saharan Late Paleozoic and Late Cenozoic glaciations 1 The main factors involved in changes of the paleoclimate are believed to be the concentration of atmospheric carbon dioxide CO2 changes in Earth s orbit long term changes in the solar constant and oceanic and orogenic changes from tectonic plate dynamics 3 Greenhouse and icehouse periods have played key roles in the evolution of life on Earth by directly and indirectly forcing biotic adaptation and turnover at various spatial scales across time 4 5 Timeline of the five known great glaciations shown in blue The periods in between depict greenhouse conditions Contents 1 Greenhouse Earth 1 1 Causes 2 Icehouse Earth 2 1 Causes 2 2 Glacials and interglacials 2 3 Snowball Earth 3 Transitions 3 1 Causes 3 2 Impacts 3 3 Research 4 List of icehouse and greenhouse periods 5 Modern conditions 6 See also 7 ReferencesGreenhouse Earth Edit An illustration of ice age Earth at its glacial maximum A greenhouse Earth is a period during which no continental glaciers exist anywhere on the planet 6 Additionally the levels of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases such as water vapor and methane are high and sea surface temperatures SSTs range from 28 C 82 4 F in the tropics to 0 C 32 F in the polar regions 7 Earth has been in a greenhouse state for about 85 of its history 6 The state should not be confused with a hypothetical runaway greenhouse effect which is an irreversible tipping point that corresponds to the ongoing runaway greenhouse effect on Venus 8 The IPCC states that a runaway greenhouse effect analogous to that of Venus appears to have virtually no chance of being induced by anthropogenic activities 9 Causes Edit There are several theories as to how a greenhouse Earth can come about Geologic climate proxies indicate that there is a strong correlation between a greenhouse state and high CO2 levels 1 However it is important to recognize that high CO2 levels are interpreted as an indicator of Earth s climate rather than as an independent driver Other phenomena have instead likely played a key role in influencing global climate by altering oceanic and atmospheric currents 10 and increasing the net amount of solar radiation absorbed by Earth s atmosphere 11 Such phenomena may include but are not limited to tectonic shifts that result in the release of greenhouse gases such as CO2 and CH4 via volcanic activity 12 Volcanoes emit massive amounts of CO2 and methane into the atmosphere when they are active which can trap enough heat to cause a greenhouse effect On Earth atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide CO2 and methane CH4 are higher trapping solar energy in the atmosphere via the greenhouse effect Methane the main component of natural gas is responsible for more than a quarter of the current global warming It s a formidable pollutant with an 80 fold higher global warming potential than CO2 in the 20 years after it s been introduced into the atmosphere An increase in the solar constant increases the net amount of solar energy absorbed into Earth s atmosphere 11 and changes in Earth s obliquity and eccentricity increase the net amount of solar radiation absorbed into Earth s atmosphere 11 Icehouse Earth EditSee also Ice age and Timeline of glaciation Earth is now in an icehouse state and ice sheets are present in both poles simultaneously 6 Climatic proxies indicate that greenhouse gas concentrations tend to lower during an icehouse Earth 13 Similarly global temperatures are also lower under Icehouse conditions 14 Earth then fluctuates between glacial and interglacial periods and the size and the distribution of continental ice sheets fluctuate dramatically 15 The fluctuation of the ice sheets results in changes in regional climatic conditions that affect the range and the distribution of many terrestrial and oceanic species 4 5 16 On scales ranging from thousands to hundreds of millions of years the Earth s climate has transitioned from warm to chilly intervals within life sustaining ranges There have been three periods of glaciation in the Phanerozoic Eon Ordovician Carboniferous and Cenozoic each lasting tens of millions of years and bringing ice down to sea level at mid latitudes During these frigid icehouse intervals sea levels were generally lower CO2 levels in the atmosphere were lower net photosynthesis and carbon burial were lower and oceanic volcanism was lower than during the alternate greenhouse intervals Transitions from Phanerozoic icehouse to greenhouse intervals coincided with biotic crises or catastrophic extinction events indicating complicated biosphere hydrosphere feedbacks 39 The glacial and interglacial periods tend to alternate in accordance with solar and climatic oscillation until Earth eventually returns to a greenhouse state 15 Earth s current icehouse state is known as the Quaternary Ice Age and began approximately 2 58 million years ago 17 However an ice sheet has existed in Antarctic for approximately 34 million years 17 Earth is now in a clement interglacial period that started approximately 11 800 years ago 17 Earth will likely phase into another interglacial period such as the Eemian which occurred between 130 000 and 115 000 years ago during which evidence of forest in North Cape Norway and hippopotamus in the Rhine and Thames Rivers can be observed 16 Earth is expected to continue to transition between glacial and interglacial periods until the cessation of the Quaternary Ice Age and will then enter another greenhouse state Causes Edit It is well established that there is strong correlation between low CO2 levels and an icehouse state 18 However that does not mean that decreasing atmospheric levels CO2 is a primary driver of a transition to the icehouse state 11 18 Rather it may be an indicator of other solar geologic and atmospheric processes at work 18 10 11 Potential drivers of previous icehouse states include the movement of the tectonic plates and the opening and the closing of oceanic gateways 19 They seem to play a crucial part in driving Earth into an icehouse state as tectonic shifts result in the transportation of cool deep water which circulates to the ocean surface and assists in ice sheet development at the poles 7 Examples of oceanic current shifts as a result of tectonic plate dynamics include the opening of the Tasmanian Gateway 36 5 million years ago which separated Australia and Antarctica 20 21 and the opening of the Drake Passage 32 8 million years ago by the separation of South America and Antarctica 21 both of which are believed to have allowed for the development of the Antarctic ice sheet The closing of the Isthmus of Panama and of the Indonesian seaway approximately 3 to 4 million years ago may also be a contributor to Earth s current icehouse state 22 One proposed driver of the Ordovician Ice Age was the evolution of land plants Under that paradigm the rapid increase in photosynthetic biomass gradually removed CO2 from the atmosphere and replaced it with increasing levels of O2 which induced global cooling 23 One proposed driver of the Quaternary Ice age is the collision of the Indian Subcontinent with Eurasia to form the Himalayas and the Tibetan Plateau 17 Under that paradigm the resulting continental uplift revealed massive quantities of unweathered silicate rock CaSiO3 which reacted with CO2 to produce CaCO3 lime and SiO2 silica The CaCO3 was eventually transported to the ocean and taken up by plankton which then died and sank to the bottom of the ocean which effectively removed CO2 from the atmosphere 17 Glacials and interglacials Edit Main articles Glacial period and Interglacial Within icehouse states are glacial and interglacial periods that cause ice sheets to build up or to retreat The main causes for glacial and interglacial periods are variations in the movement of Earth around the Sun 24 The astronomical components discovered by the Serbian geophysicist Milutin Milankovic and now known as Milankovitch cycles include the axial tilt of Earth the orbital eccentricity or shape of the orbit and the precession or wobble of Earth s rotation The tilt of the axis tends to fluctuate from 21 5 to 24 5 and back every 41 000 years on the vertical axis The change actually affects the seasonality on Earth since a change in solar radiation hits certain areas of the planet more often on a higher tilt and a lower tilt creates a more even set of seasons worldwide The changes can be seen in ice cores which also contain evidence that during glacial times at the maximum extension of the ice sheets the atmosphere had lower levels of carbon dioxide That may be caused by the increase or the redistribution of the acid base balance with bicarbonate and carbonate ions that deals with alkalinity During an icehouse period only 20 of the time is spent in interglacial or warmer times 24 Model simulations suggest that the current interglacial climate state will continue for at least another 100 000 years because of CO2 emissions including the complete deglaciation of the Northern Hemisphere 25 Snowball Earth Edit Main article Snowball Earth A snowball Earth is the complete opposite of greenhouse Earth in which Earth s surface is completely frozen over However a snowball Earth technically does not have continental ice sheets like during the icehouse state The Great Infra Cambrian Ice Age has been claimed to be the host of such a world and in 1964 the scientist W Brian Harland brought forth his discovery of indications of glaciers in the low latitudes Harland and Rudwick That became a problem for Harland because of the thought of the Runaway Snowball Paradox a kind of Snowball effect that once Earth enters the route of becoming a snowball Earth it would never be able to leave that state However Joseph Kirschvink de brought up a solution to the paradox in 1992 Since the continents were then huddled at the low and the middle latitudes there was less ocean water available to absorb the higher amount solar energy hitting the tropics and there was also an increase in rainfall because more land exposed to higher solar energy might have caused chemical weathering which would contribute to removal of CO2 from the atmosphere Both conditions might have caused a substantial drop in CO2 atmospheric levels which resulted in cooling temperatures and increasing ice albedo ice reflectivity of incoming solar radiation which would further increase global cooling a positive feedback That might have been the mechanism of entering Snowball Earth state Kirschvink explained that the way to get out of Snowball Earth state could be connected again to carbon dioxide A possible explanation is that during Snowball Earth volcanic activity would not halt but accumulate atmospheric CO2 At the same time global ice cover would prevent chemical weathering particularly hydrolysis responsible for removal of CO2 from the atmosphere CO2 therefore accumulated in the atmosphere Once the atmosphere accumulation of CO2 reached a threshold temperature would rise enough for ice sheets to start melting That would in turn reduce the ice albedo effect which would in turn further reduce the ice cover and allow an exit from Snowball Earth At the end of Snowball Earth before the equilibrium thermostat between volcanic activity and the by then slowly resuming chemical weathering was reinstated CO2 in the atmosphere had accumulated enough to cause temperatures to peak to as much as 60 C before they eventually settled down Around the same geologic period of Snowball Earth it is debated if it was the cause or the result of Snowball Earth the Great Oxygenation Event GOE was occurring The event known as the Cambrian Explosion followed and produced the beginnings of populous bilateral organisms as well as a greater diversity and mobility in multicellular life 26 However some biologists claim that a complete snowball Earth could not have happened since photosynthetic life would not have survived under many meters of ice without sunlight However sunlight has been observed to penetrate meters of ice in Antarctica citation needed Most scientists citation needed now believe that a hard Snowball Earth one completely covered by ice is probably impossible However a slushball Earth with points of opening near the equator is considered to be possible Recent studies may have again complicated the idea of a snowball Earth In October 2011 a team of French researchers announced that the carbon dioxide during the last speculated snowball Earth may have been lower than originally stated which provides a challenge in finding out how Earth got out of its state and whether a snowball or a slushball Earth occurred 27 Transitions EditCauses Edit The Eocene which occurred between 53 and 49 million years ago was Earth s warmest temperature period for 100 million years 28 However the super greenhouse period had eventually become an icehouse period by the late Eocene It is believed that the decline of CO2 caused the change but mechanisms of positive feedback may have contributed to the cooling The best available record for a transition from an icehouse to greenhouse period in which plant life existed is for the Permian period which occurred around 300 million years ago A major transition took place 40 million years ago and caused Earth to change from a moist icy planet in which rainforests covered the tropics to a hot dry and windy location in which little could survive Professor Isabel P Montanez of University of California Davis who has researched the time period found the climate to be highly unstable and to be marked by dips and rises in carbon dioxide 29 Impacts Edit The Eocene Oligocene transition was the latest and occurred approximately 34 million years ago It resulted in a rapid global cooling the glaciation of Antarctica and a series of biotic extinction events The most dramatic species turnover event associated with the time period is the Grande Coupure a period that saw the replacement of European tree dwelling and leaf eating mammal species by migratory species from Asia 30 Research Edit Paleoclimatology is a branch of science that attempts to understand the history of greenhouse and icehouse conditions over geological time The study of ice cores dendrochronology ocean and lake sediments varve palynology paleobotany isotope analysis such as radiometric dating and stable isotope analysis and other climate proxies allows scientists to create models of Earth s past energy budgets and the resulting climate One study has shown that atmospheric carbon dioxide levels during the Permian age rocked back and forth between 250 parts per million which is close to today s levels up to 2 000 parts per million 29 Studies on lake sediments suggest that the hothouse or super greenhouse Eocene was in a permanent El Nino state after the 10 C warming of the deep ocean and high latitude surface temperatures shut down the Pacific Ocean s El Nino Southern Oscillation 31 A theory was suggested for the Paleocene Eocene Thermal Maximum on the sudden decrease of the carbon isotopic composition of the global inorganic carbon pool by 2 5 parts per million 32 A hypothesis posed for this drop of isotopes was the increase of methane hydrates the trigger for which remains a mystery The increase of atmospheric methane which happens to be a potent but short lived greenhouse gas increased the global temperatures by 6 C with the assistance of the less potent carbon dioxide citation needed List of icehouse and greenhouse periods EditA greenhouse period ran from 4 6 to 2 4 billion years ago Huronian Glaciation an icehouse period that ran from 2 4 billion to 2 1 billion years ago A greenhouse period ran from 2 1 billion to 720 million years ago Cryogenian an icehouse period that ran from 720 to 635 million years ago during which the entire Earth was at times frozen over A greenhouse period ran from 635 million years ago to 450 million years ago Andean Saharan glaciation an icehouse period that ran from 450 million to 420 million years ago A greenhouse period ran from 420 million years ago to 360 million years ago Late Paleozoic Ice Age an icehouse period that ran from 360 million to 260 million years ago A greenhouse period ran from 260 million years ago to 33 9 million years ago Late Cenozoic Ice Age the current icehouse period which began 33 9 million years agoModern conditions EditCurrently Earth is in an icehouse climate state About 34 million years ago ice sheets began to form in Antarctica the ice sheets in the Arctic did not start forming until 2 million years ago 33 Some processes that may have led to the current icehouse may be connected to the development of the Himalayan Mountains and the opening of the Drake Passage between South America and Antarctica but climate model simulations suggest that the early opening of the Drake Passage played only a limited role and the later constriction of the Tethys and Central American Seaways is more important in explaining the observed Cenozoic cooling 34 Scientists have tried to compare the past transitions between icehouse and greenhouse and vice versa to understand what type of climate state Earth will have next Without the human influence on the greenhouse gas concentration a glacial period would be the next climate state Predicted changes in orbital forcing suggest that in absence of human made global warming the next glacial period would begin at least 50 000 years from now 35 see Milankovitch cycles but the ongoing anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions mean the next climate state will be a greenhouse Earth period 33 Permanent ice is actually a rare phenomenon in the history of Earth and occurs only in coincidence with the icehouse effect which has affected about 20 of Earth s history See also EditList of periods and events in climate historyReferences Edit a b c Summerhayes Colin P 8 September 2020 Palaeoclimatology from snowball earth to the anthropocene ISBN 978 1 119 59138 2 OCLC 1236201953 Archived from the original on 18 April 2021 Retrieved 17 April 2021 Paillard D 2006 07 28 ATMOSPHERE What Drives the Ice Age Cycle Science 313 5786 455 456 doi 10 1126 science 1131297 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 16873636 S2CID 128379788 Archived from the original on 2021 11 21 Retrieved 2021 04 17 P Summerhayes C 13 July 2015 Earths evolving climate a geological perspective ISBN 978 1 118 89737 9 OCLC 907811494 Archived from the original on 21 November 2021 Retrieved 17 April 2021 a b Godfrey Laurie R Samonds Karen E Baldwin Justin W Sutherland Michael R Kamilar Jason M Allfisher Kristen L 2020 08 08 Mid Cenozoic climate change extinction and faunal turnover in Madagascar and their bearing on the evolution of lemurs BMC Evolutionary Biology 20 1 97 doi 10 1186 s12862 020 01628 1 ISSN 1471 2148 PMC 7414565 PMID 32770933 a b Nge Francis J Biffin Ed Thiele Kevin R Waycott Michelle 2020 01 22 Extinction pulse at Eocene Oligocene boundary drives diversification dynamics of two Australian temperate floras Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 287 1919 20192546 doi 10 1098 rspb 2019 2546 ISSN 0962 8452 PMC 7015341 PMID 31964242 a b c Understanding Earth s Deep Past 2011 08 02 doi 10 17226 13111 ISBN 978 0 309 20915 1 Archived from the original on 2021 11 21 Retrieved 2021 04 17 a b Stella Woodard 2012 Oceanic and atmospheric response to climate change over varying geologic timescales Texas A amp M University OCLC 805585971 Archived from the original on 2021 04 18 Retrieved 2021 04 17 Steffen Will Rockstrom Johan Richardson Katherine Lenton Timothy M Folke Carl Liverman Diana Summerhayes Colin P Barnosky Anthony D Cornell Sarah E Crucifix Michel Donges Jonathan F Fetzer Ingo Lade Steven J Scheffer Marten Winkelmann Ricarda Schellnhuber Hans Joachim 2018 08 06 Trajectories of the Earth System in the Anthropocene Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 115 33 8252 8259 Bibcode 2018PNAS 115 8252S doi 10 1073 pnas 1810141115 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 6099852 PMID 30082409 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2018 11 09 Retrieved 2018 11 02 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b Young Grant M March 2019 Aspects of the Archean Proterozoic transition How the great Huronian Glacial Event was initiated by rift related uplift and terminated at the rift drift transition during break up of Lauroscandia Earth Science Reviews 190 171 189 Bibcode 2019ESRv 190 171Y doi 10 1016 j earscirev 2018 12 013 ISSN 0012 8252 S2CID 134347305 Archived from the original on 2021 11 21 Retrieved 2021 04 17 a b c d e Haigh Joanna D Cargill Peter 2015 06 23 The Sun s Influence on Climate Princeton University Press doi 10 23943 princeton 9780691153834 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 691 15383 4 Archived from the original on 2021 11 21 Retrieved 2021 04 17 Schmidt Anja Fristad Kirsten E Elkins Tanton Linda T eds 2015 Volcanism and Global Environmental Change Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 cbo9781107415683 ISBN 9781107415683 Archived from the original on 2021 11 21 Retrieved 2021 04 17 Review of Global mean surface temperature and climate sensitivity of the EECO PETM and latest Paleocene 2020 02 14 doi 10 5194 cp 2019 167 rc1 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Zhang Laiming 2019 The evolution of latitudinal temperature gradients from the latest Cretaceous through the Present Earth Science Reviews 189 147 158 Bibcode 2019ESRv 189 147Z doi 10 1016 j earscirev 2019 01 025 S2CID 134433505 Archived from the original on 2021 11 21 Retrieved 2021 04 17 via Science Direct a b Summerhayes C P 2020 Palaeoclimatology from snowball earth to the anthropocene Chichester West Sussex ISBN 978 1 119 59138 2 OCLC 1145913723 Archived from the original on 2021 11 21 Retrieved 2021 04 17 a b van Kolfschoten Th August 2000 The Eemian mammal fauna of central Europe Netherlands Journal of Geosciences 79 2 3 269 281 doi 10 1017 s0016774600021752 ISSN 0016 7746 a b c d e Rose James January 2010 Quaternary climates a perspective for global warming Proceedings of the Geologists Association 121 3 334 341 doi 10 1016 j pgeola 2010 07 001 ISSN 0016 7878 Archived from the original on 2021 11 21 Retrieved 2021 04 17 a b c Woodard S C amp Thomas D J 2012 Oceanic and atmospheric response to climate change over varying geologic timescales by Stella C Woodard Texas A amp M University SMITH ALAN G PICKERING KEVIN T May 2003 Oceanic gateways as a critical factor to initiate icehouse Earth Journal of the Geological Society 160 3 337 340 Bibcode 2003JGSoc 160 337S doi 10 1144 0016 764902 115 ISSN 0016 7649 S2CID 127653725 Archived from the original on 2007 11 30 Retrieved 2021 04 17 The Tasmanian Gateway Between Australia and Antarctica Paleoclimate and Paleoceanography ODP Preliminary Report Vol 189 Ocean Drilling Program June 2000 doi 10 2973 odp pr 189 2000 Archived from the original on 2021 11 21 Retrieved 2021 04 17 a b Stant S A Lara J McGonigal K L Ladner B C 2004 04 22 Quaternary Nannofossil Biostratigraphy from Ocean Drilling Program Leg 189 Tasmanian Gateway Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program 189 Scientific Results Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program Ocean Drilling Program vol 189 doi 10 2973 odp proc sr 189 109 2004 archived from the original on 2021 11 21 retrieved 2021 04 15 Smith Alan G Kevin T Pickering 2003 Oceanic gateways as a critical factor to initiate icehouse Earth Journal of the Geological Society 160 3 337 340 Bibcode 2003JGSoc 160 337S doi 10 1144 0016 764902 115 S2CID 127653725 Lenton Timothy M Crouch Michael Johnson Martin Pires Nuno Dolan Liam February 2012 First plants cooled the Ordovician Nature Geoscience 5 2 86 89 Bibcode 2012NatGe 5 86L doi 10 1038 ngeo1390 ISSN 1752 0894 Archived from the original on 2021 03 20 Retrieved 2021 04 17 a b Broecker Wallace S George H Denton January 1990 What Drives Glacial Cycles Scientific American 262 49 56 Bibcode 1990SciAm 262a 49B doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0190 48 A Ganopolski R Winkelmann H J Schellnhuber 2016 Critical insolation CO2 relation for diagnosing past and future glacial inception Nature 529 7585 200 203 Bibcode 2016Natur 529 200G doi 10 1038 nature16494 PMID 26762457 S2CID 4466220 Maruyama S M Santosh 2008 Models on Snowball Earth and Cambrian explosion A synopsis Gondwana Research 14 1 2 22 32 Bibcode 2008GondR 14 22M doi 10 1016 j gr 2008 01 004 CNRS Delegation Paris Michel Ange Snowball Earth s hypothesis challenged ScienceDaily Archived from the original on 19 October 2011 Retrieved 24 November 2011 Herath Anuradha K From Greenhouse to icehouse Astrobio Archived from the original on 14 October 2011 Retrieved 28 October 2011 a b University of California Davis A Bumpy Shift from Ice House to Greenhouse ScienceDaily Archived from the original on 10 June 2013 Retrieved 4 November 2011 Prothero D R 1994 01 01 The Late Eocene Oligocene Extinctions PDF Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences 22 1 145 165 Bibcode 1994AREPS 22 145P doi 10 1146 annurev ea 22 050194 001045 Huber Matthew Rodrigo Caballero 7 February 2003 Eocene El Nino Evidence for Robust Tropical Dynamics in the Hothouse Science 299 5608 877 881 Bibcode 2003Sci 299 877H doi 10 1126 science 1078766 PMID 12574626 S2CID 19838005 Higgins John A Daniel P Schrag 2006 Beyond Methane Towards a theory for the Paleocene Eocene Thermal Maximum Earth and Planetary Science Letters 245 3 4 523 537 Bibcode 2006E amp PSL 245 523H doi 10 1016 j epsl 2006 03 009 a b Montanez Isabel G S Soreghan March 2006 Earth s Fickle Climate Lessons Learned from Deep Time Ice Ages Geotimes 51 24 27 Zhang Zhongshi amp Nisancioglu Kerim amp Flatoy F amp Bentsen M amp Bethke I amp Wang H 2009 Did the opening of the Drake Passage play a significant role in Cenozoic cooling Archived from the original on 2021 11 21 Retrieved 2020 09 14 Berger A Loutre MF August 2002 Climate An exceptionally long interglacial ahead Science 297 5585 1287 8 doi 10 1126 science 1076120 PMID 12193773 S2CID 128923481 Portals Earth sciences Geology Paleontology Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Greenhouse and icehouse Earth amp oldid 1135009819, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.