Zusammenfassung der Ressource
LEC 103 - Global Climate Change 1.1
- Past climate
- Relative dating
- Uses principles of stratigraphy and the
study of fossils to determine the relative
age of rocks and sediments
- Absolute dating
- Radiometric dating
techniques were developed
to determine the absolute
ages
- Dates in years of rocks
and sediments
- Isotopic dating
- Atoms of radioactive elements
spontaneously disintegrate to
form atoms of a different
element, liberating energy in
the process
- The reason that radioactive
decay offers a dependable
means of keeping time is...
- The number of radioactive
atoms in a mineral declines
at a fixed rate over time
- The decay rate does not vary with the change in T
or P which typically accompany geological
processes
- The isotopic age of rock = time
since the isotopic clock was reset
- When the isotopes were locked into the minerals
e.g. crystallisation from melt or during
metamorphism
- Radioactive parent
elements decompose to
form daughter elements
- Types of dating
- Radiocarbon, 14C, Dating
- All atoms of the same
element have the same
atomic number. Different
isotopes of an element
have the same no. of
protons but different no. of
neutrons
- C isotopes: 6,7,and 8 neutrons
i.e. atomic masses of 12,13,14
- 12C and 13C are stable and do not
disintegrate. 14C is generated in Earth's
atmosphere; 14C in the atmosphere remains
constant
- Growing organism incorpoates C
into tissues at the ratio found in the
atompshere
- Death; C is not longer absorbed
- 14 C in tissue decays
- Half of the radioactivity will
be lost after 5730 years.
- By measuring the amount of
14C remaining in the fossil the
date at which death occurred
can e determined
- Rubidium strontium dating
- Argon argon dating
- Uranium series dating
- Rocks and
sediments and
fossils
- Observations of rocks/sediments/fossils
provide information on past climate. this
coupled with their ages, implies climate
chnage
- Landforms
- Glacial Cirques
- Lowest cirque flor of
the group of
contemporaneous
cirques = snowline
- Ancient snowline can be compared with
present dat snowline, and temperature
changes calculated
- U-shaped vallys
- Sand DUnes
- Large continental sand
dunes only develop where
precipitation is <100 mm a-1
- If precipitation >100mm
a-1, vegetation cover
reduces sand movement
and encourages soil
development
- Fossil and dunes currently
sound in areas of high rainfall
suggest that rainfall has
increase since dune formation
- Permafrost
- Permanently frozen ground at or
below freezing point of water for
two or more years where only
superficial layer may thaw during
summer
- Former mean annual temperatures can
be inferred from distribution of ancient
permafrost features
- Covers 25% of
earths land
surface
- Features include
- Ice wedges, ice
mounds, patterned
ground
- Varves
- Regular alternations
in lake sediment
layers
- Couplets/pairs represent
annual seasonal deposition
- Fine grained layers =
autumn/winter. Coarse grained
layers = spring/summer
- Characteristics of an
individual varve layer
may provide 1) an
indicator of the climate at
the time of deposition
and 2) a date
- Palynology
- Study of pollen -
organic miscrofossils,
5-500 micrometers in
size
- Some sediments contain
pollen grains derived
from local/regional
vegetation
- Analysis of abundance and
type of pollen grains in a
particular horizon provides a
picture of vegetation which
thrived at the time of
deposition
- Beetles
- Used for climate change
studies for rocks
deposited in last 22 ka,
although beetles have
existed the Lower
Permian
- Diatoms
- Diatoms are aquatic
microscopic unicellular
algae
- They absorb nutrients and
Co2 from the surrounding
water and are commonly
preserved in lake sediments
- Use to establish...
- Past lake quality
- Past shorelines
- Interface of fresh
and saline
envrionments
- E.g. salinity, nutrients,
temperature
- Deep sea cores
- Sea floor offers more
continuous stratigraphic
record than terrestrial
sections
- Cores indicate a series of
cold and warm episodes
related to glacials and
interglacials for last 2.6 Ma
- Indicator
- 18O/16O of foraminifera
- Temperature,
ice volume
- Coarse debris
- Iceberg rafting
- Fluvial sediments
- River inputs
- Foraminifera are
microscopic aquatic
organisms with a CaCo3
shell
- They are especially
sensitive to water
temperature and
salinity