Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
International

Decreased carbon dioxide formed Antarctic ice sheet?

Darpan News Desk IANS, 31 Jul, 2014 07:39 AM
    Turning a long-held climate shift theory on its head, researchers have found that decreased carbon dioxide (CO2) levels during a major climate shift 34 million years ago led to initiation of Antarctic glaciation.
     
    The finding counters a 40-year-old theory suggesting massive rearrangements of the Earth's continents caused global cooling and the abrupt formation of the Antarctic ice sheet.
     
    The long-held, prevailing theory known as "Southern Ocean gateway opening" is not the best explanation for the climate shift that occurred during the Eocene-Oligocene transition when the Earth's polar regions were ice-free, the study showed.
     
    The textbook version has been that gateway opening, in which Australia pulled away from Antarctica, isolated the polar continent from warm tropical currents, and changed temperature gradients and circulation patterns in the ocean around Antarctica, which in turn began to generate the ice sheet, explained Matthew Huber from University of New Hampshire in the US.
     
    “We have shown that, instead, CO2-driven cooling initiated the ice sheet and that this altered ocean circulation," Huber added.
     
    For their study, researchers simply modeled the Eocene-Oligocene world as if it contained an Antarctic ice sheet of near-modern size and shape.
     
    They explored the results within the same kind of coupled ocean-atmosphere model used to project future climate change and across a range of CO2 values that are likely to occur in the next 100 years (560 to 1200 parts per million).
     
    The study, published in the journal Nature, will provide scientists insight into the climate change implications of current rising global CO2 levels.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Update on the Mysterious Disappearance of Malaysian Airlines Flight MH370

    Update on the Mysterious Disappearance of Malaysian Airlines Flight MH370
    40 ships and 34 aircrafts are actively searching for the missing Malaysian jet. After three days, no concrete evidence has been found to provide a conclusion for the plane’s disappearance. Oil slicks were traced North East of Kota Baru, Malaysia, but still no debris, or signs of a fatal crash.

    Update on the Mysterious Disappearance of Malaysian Airlines Flight MH370

    Myanmar named World's Best Tourist Destination

    Myanmar named World's Best Tourist Destination
    Myanmar will be presented the award of World's Best Tourist Destination for 2014 by the European Union Council on Tourism and Trade soon, media reported Sunday.

    Myanmar named World's Best Tourist Destination

    Art of Living centre set on fire in Pakistan

    Art of Living centre set on fire in Pakistan
    Around 15 gunmen entered the centre at Bani Gala on the outskirts of Islamabad late Saturday and vandalised it after tying up the security guards to trees in the complex

    Art of Living centre set on fire in Pakistan

    MH370: Malaysian Airliner Yet Untraced; Terror Suspected

    MH370: Malaysian Airliner Yet Untraced; Terror Suspected
    The aircraft vanished without a trace about an hour after taking off from Kuala Lumpur early Saturday. The Boeing 777-200ER was presumed to have crashed off the Vietnamese coast Saturday into the South China Sea.

    MH370: Malaysian Airliner Yet Untraced; Terror Suspected

    Ted Turner hospitalised

    Ted Turner hospitalised
    Media Mogul Ted Turner was hospitalised in Argentina's capital Buenos Aires Saturday for an appendicitis operation.

    Ted Turner hospitalised

    Breaking: Flight carrying 239 people from Malaysia to Beijing crashes

    Breaking: Flight carrying 239 people from Malaysia to Beijing crashes
    The B777-200 aircraft departed from Malaysia's capital Kuala Lumpur early Saturday and was expected to land in Beijing the same day

    Breaking: Flight carrying 239 people from Malaysia to Beijing crashes