December 22, 2006

AL GORE VS. THE SUN:

Earth's Climate Changes in Tune with Eccentric Orbital Rhythms: Ocean sediment reveals the pattern behind the rise and fall of ice ages and the shape of Earth's orbit. (David Biello, 12/22/06, Scientific American)

The useless shells of tiny ocean animals--foraminifera--drift silently down through the depths of the equatorial Pacific Ocean, coming to rest more than three miles (five kilometers) below the surface. Slowly, over time, this coating of microscopic shells and other detritus builds up. "In the central Pacific, the sedimentation rate adds between one and two centimeters every 1,000 years," explains Heiko Pälike, a geologist at the National Oceanography Center in Southampton, England. "If you go down in the sediment one inch, you go back in time 2,500 years."

Pälike and his colleagues went considerably further than that, pulling a sediment core from the depths of the Pacific that stretched back 42 million years. Limiting their analysis to the Oligocene--a glacial time period that lasted between roughly 34 million and 23 million years ago--the researchers found that global climate responds to slight changes in the amount of sunlight hitting Earth during shifts in its orbit between elliptical and circular. "Of all the records so far, this is both the longest and, also, the clearest that most of the climatic variations between glacial and interglacial at that time [were] most likely related to orbital cycles," Pälike says.


It's entirely in keeping with their self-centeredness that environmentalists think they have more effect more than the sun.

Posted by Orrin Judd at December 22, 2006 5:44 PM
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