• Back to new
maps page
A quick background to the last ice age
The time span of the last 130,000 years
has seen the global climate system switch from
warm interglacial to cold glacial conditions, and back again. This
broad interglacial-glacial-interglacial climate oscillation has been
recurring on a similar periodicity for about the last 900,000 years, though each
individual cycle has had its own idiosyncrasies in terms of the timing and
magnitude of changes. As is usually the case with the study of the past, data are
in short supply, and only a few sketchy outlines are known for the
earliest cycles (Winograd et al. 1997). Even for the most recent oscillation
beginning around 130,000 years ago there is still too much ambiguity in terms of
the errors in geological dating techniques, in the gaps in the record, and
in the slowness of responses by indicator species, to know precisely when
certain events occurred and whether the climate changes were truly synchronous
between different regions. The general picture summarized here (and in the
separate map sections below) roughly reflects the present consensus gained from
ice cores, deep ocean cores, and terrestrial and lake sediments around the
world.
Warmth. Around
130,000-110,000 years ago (the Eemian interglacial),
the Earth's climates were generally much like those of today, though
somewhat warmer and moister in many regions. The climate record derived from
long ice cores
taken through the Greenland ice cap suggested that the warm climate of the
Eemian might have been punctuated by many sudden and fairly short-lived cold phases,
but these results are now thought of as inaccurate because the lower
layers of the ice sheet have become buckled and jumbled up. However, at
least one major cold and dry event during the Eemian seems to be
corroborated by the terrestrial pollen record from Europe and China
(Zhisheng & Porter 1997). The issue remains controversial, as this review
article explains.
Cooling. Though the time
at which the Eemian interglacial ended is subject to some uncertainty
(it was probably around 110,000 years ago), what does seem evident from
the sediment records that cross this boundary is that it was a
relatively sudden event and not a gradual slide into colder conditions
taking many thousands of years. The recent high-resolution Atlantic
sediment record of Adkins et al (1997) suggests that the move from
interglacial to much colder-than-present glacial conditions occurred
over a period of less than 400 years (with the limitations on the resolution of the
sediment record leaving open the possibility that the change was in fact very
much more rapid than this).
Following this initial cooling event,
conditions often changed in sudden leaps and bounds followed by several
thousand years of relatively stable climate or even a temporary
reversal to warmth, but overall there was a decline. Northern forest
zones retreated and fragmented as the summers and winters grew colder.
Large ice sheets began to grow in the northern latitudes when the snow
that fell in winter failed to melt, and instead piled up from one year
to the next until it reached thousands of metres in thickness.
As the cold grew more severe, the Earth's
climate also became drier because
the global 'weather machine' that evaporates water from the oceans and
drops it on the land operates less effectively at colder temperatures and
when the polar sea ice is extensive. Even in areas that were not directly
affected by the ice sheets, aridity began to cause forests to die and to give
way to dry grassland, which requires less water to survive. Eventually,
much of the grassland retreated to give way to deserts and semi-deserts, as
global conditions reached a cold, dry low point around 70,000 years ago (this
is called the Lower Pleniglacial). By this time, most of northern Europe
and Canada were covered by thick ice sheets.
In-between. By around
60,000-55,000 years ago, conditions around the world had become warmer,
though still generally colder than today. The ice melted back
partially, and there followed a long 'middling' phase in which the
climate oscillated between warmer and colder conditions, often in sudden jumps.
During some parts of this phase, conditions in the tropics may have
been moister than they are at present, and at other times they were
drier. Generally, the mid-latitude zones seem to have been drier than
present, with cold steppe and wooded steppe instead of forests.
Cooling again. After
about 30,000 years ago, the Earth's climate system entered another big
freeze-up; temperatures fell, deserts expanded
and ice sheets spread across the northern latitudes much as they had
done 70,000 years ago. This cold and arid phase which reached its most
extreme point sometime around 21,000-17,000 years ago (18,000-15,000
radiocarbon years ago) is known as the Late Glacial Cold Stage (and is also sometimes
called the Upper Pleniglacial).
The point at which the global ice
extent was at its greatest, about 21,000 years ago (18,000 14C years
ago) is known as the Last Glacial Maximum. The Last Glacial Maximum was
much more arid than present almost everywhere, with desert and
semi-desert occupying huge areas of the continents and forests shrunk
back into refugia. But in fact, the greatest global aridity
(rather than ice extent) may have been reached slightly after the Last
Glacial Maximum, somewhere during the interval 19,000-17,000 years ago
(17,000-15,000 14C years ago).
Interstadials. Sudden warm and moist phases occurred at
various times during the timespan of the last glacial phase, often
taking Greenland and Europe from a full-glacial climate to conditions
about as warm as at present. For the time period between 115,000 and
14,000 years ago, 24 of these short lived warm events have so far been recognized from the
Greenland ice core data (where they are called 'Dansgaard-Oeschger events'),
although many lesser warming events also occurred (Dansgaard et al. 1993). From
the speed of the climate changes recorded in the Greenland ice cap
(Dansgaard et al. 1989), and by observation of the speed of change in
sedimentation conditions on land, it is widely believed that the complete 'jump' in climate
occurred over only a few decades. The interstadials lasted for varying spans of
time, usually a few centuries to about 2,000 years, before an equally rapid
cooling returned conditions to their previous state. Recent study of
high-resolution deep sea cores (Bond et al. 1997) suggests that for at least the last
30,000 years, interstadials tended to occur at the warmer points of a
background north Atlantic (and global?) temperature cycle which had a periodicity
of around 1500 years. Not every warm peak was marked by an interstadial,
but when each interstadial did occur it tended to begin at around the peak
of this background temperature cycle. The same pattern seems to have
dominated the occurrence of Heinrich events (below), which tended to begin at the
coldest point of the temperature cycle, and the same basic 1500-year climate
cycle has apparently continued into the very different world of the Holocene
(below).
Apart from the north Atlantic region,
interstadials may well have affected climate in other parts of the
world; some of them show up as strong temperature changes in the
Antarctic ice cores at the other end of the world. They are also
associated with brief peaks in atmospheric methane concentration,
suggesting that the biological activity of swamps and herbivores around
the world increased as a result of moisture and warmth.
Heinrich events. Opposite in sign to the interstadials were
sudden intense cold and dry phases which occasionally affected Europe
and the north Atlantic region, and possibly many other parts of the world.
The Heinrich events were first recognized as the traces of 'ice surges'
into the north Atlantic, but they show up in the Greenland ice cores and at
least some
are also detectable in the European pollen records and distant
Antarctic ice
cores. They may also show up as pine pollen peaks in Florida, and
environmental changes in the Middle East, China, New Zealand and South
America, though without better dating control it is difficult to say
with confidence that these really are part of a global-scale pattern
that fits the timing of northern Atlantic Heinrich events. In fact,
Heinrich events 'sensu stricto' are merely the most extreme of a
spectrum of sudden, brief cold events which seem to have occurred very
frequently over the last 115,000 years. The Greenland and
North Atlantic record (Bond & Lotti 1995) suggests that during the
last 50,000 years, Heinrich events occurred around 41,000, 35,000, 23,000,
21,000 and 17,000-15,000 'real' years ago, apparently tending to start at the
'low point' of a 1500-year temperature cycle. Each interstadial lasted
between several hundred and several thousand years, with the 21,000 y.a. event
and the 17,000-15,000 y.a. event both perhaps representing the 'extreme'
Last Glacial Maximum conditions mapped below. If this is the case, slightly
milder (though still much more cold and arid than present) conditions may have
prevailed during some parts of this period.
Warming, then a cold snap. Around
14,000 years ago (about 13,000 radiocarbon years ago), there was a rapid global warming and
moistening of climates, perhaps occurring within the space of only a few years or
decades. In many respects, this phase seems to have resembled some of the
earlier interstadials that had occurred so many times before during the glacial
period. Conditions in many mid-latitude areas appear to have been about as warm
as they are today, although many other areas - whilst warmer than
during the Late Glacial Cold Stage - seem to have remained slightly cooler
than at present. Forests began to spread back, and the ice sheets began to
retreat. However, after a few thousand years of recovery, the Earth was suddenly
plunged back into a new and very short-lived ice age known as the Younger Dryas.
Although the Younger Dryas did not affect everywhere in the world, it
destroyed the returning forests in the north and led to a brief
resurgence of the ice sheets. This
map by D. Peteet shows the possible distribution of Younger Dryas
cooling around the world. The main cooling event that marks the
beginning of the Younger Dryas seems have occurred within less than 100 years,
according to Greenland ice core data (Alley et al. 1993). After about 1,300 years
of cold and aridity, the Younger Dryas seems to have ended in the space of
only a few decades (various estimates from ice core climate indicators
range from 20 - 70 years for this sudden transition) when conditions became
as warm as they are today. Around half of the warming seems to have
occurred in the space of a single span of 15 years, according to the latest
detailed analyses of the Greenland ice core record (Taylor et al. 1997).
The start of the present warm phase, the Holocene. Following
the sudden ending of the Younger Dryas, about 11,500 years ago (or
10,000 14C years ago), forests quickly regained the ground that they had lost
to cold and aridity. Ice sheets again began melting, though because of
their size they took about two thousand more years to disappear completely.
The Earth entered several thousand years of conditions warmer and moister
than today; the Saharan and Arabian deserts almost completely disappeared
under a vegetation cover, and in the northern latitudes forests grew slightly
closer to the poles than they do at present. This phase, known as the
'Holocene optimum' occurred between about 9,000 and 5,000 years ago (8,000-4,000
14C years ago), though the timing of the warmest and moistest
conditions probably varied somewhat between different regions. Some of the events
and regional climatic trends of the last 10,000 years are summarized in
this time
line by N.C. Heywood. The 'optimum' may have been punctuated by
a severe cold and dry phase that affected climates across north Africa,
southern Asia, Europe, the Americas and Antarctica about 8,200 years ago (7,500
14 y.a.), perhaps lasting for a century or two before a return to warmer
and wetter conditions (Stager & Mayewski 1997). In Africa at least, the
climate does not seem to have returned to the moist warm 'optimum' state that
prevailed before this sudden drought, but it was significantly moister than at
present. After about 5,000 years ago, there was a further cooling and drying in
many areas (again, often sudden and stepwise), and conditions became more
similar to the present-day. A particularly widespread cool event associated
with relatively wet conditions seems to have occurred in many parts of the
world around 2600 years ago (van Geel et al. 1996). A general pattern in climate
during the Holocene has been detected from high-resolution cores in the
north Atlantic. It seems that at least in the North Atlantic region, and possibly
globally, there was a warm-cold cycle with a periodicity of around 1500
years (Bond et al. 1997). In the north Atlantic region, and probably adjacent
oceanic areas of Europe, the change from peak to trough of each period
was about 2 deg.C , a very substantial change in mean annual temperature
(though only a small fraction of the change between glacial and interglacial
conditions). The cold phases seem to have been relatively abrupt, and
each lasted several centuries before an apparently rapid switch back to
warmer conditions. on this approximate periodicity are dated at 11,100
10,300 9,400 8,100 5,900 4,200 2,800 and 1400 years ago; they include
the 8,600 y.a. and 2,600 y.a. events which seem to have been the most
extreme in terms of showing up in terrestrial records around the world.
The unstable nature of the Earth's climate history suggests that it may
be liable to change suddenly in the future. By putting large quantities
of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, humans are exerting pressure on
the climate system which might produce a drastic change without much prior
warning. As the geologist W.S. Broecker has said, "Climate is an angry beast,
and we are poking it with sticks".
A summary of the sequence of events for the last 130,000 years ('real'
years)
Phases about as warm or warmer than the present are marked in bold.
150,000 y.a. - cold, dry full glacial world
around 130,000 y.a. - rapid warming initiates the Eemian interglacial (Stage 5e)
130,000-110,000 y.a. - global climates generally warmer and moister
than present, but with progressive cooling to temperatures more similar to
present.
(except for possible global cold, dry event at 121,000 y.a.)
?110,000 y.a. - a strong cooling marks the end of the Eemian interglacial (Stage 5e).
105,000-95,000 y.a. - climate warms slightly but still cooler and drier than present; strong fluctuations.
95,000 - 93,000 y.a. - another cooler phase similar to that at 110,000 y.a.
93,000 - 75,000 y.a. - a milder phase, resembling that at 105,000-95,000 y.a.
75,000 - 60,000 y.a. - full glacial world, cold and dry (the 'Lower Pleniglacial' or Stage 4)
60,000 - 25,000 y.a. - 'middling phase' of highly unstable but generally cooler and drier-than-present conditions (Stage 3)
25,000 - 15,000 y.a. - full glacial world, cold and dry; Stage 2 (includes the 'Last Glacial Maximum')
(This period includes two 'coldest phases' - Heinrich Events - at around 23,000-21,000 y.a. and at 17,000-14,500 y.a.)
14,500 y.a. - rapid warming and moistening of climates in some areas. Rapid deglaciation begins.
13,500 y.a. - nearly all areas with climates at least as warm and moist as today's
12,800 y.a. (+/- 200 years)- rapid onset of cool, dry Younger Dryas in many areas
11,500 y.a. (+/- 200 years) - Younger Dryas ends suddenly, back to warmth and moist climates (Holocene, or Stage 1)
9,000 y.a. - 8,200 y.a. - climates warmer and often moister than today's
about 8,200 y.a. - sudden cool and dry phase in many areas
8,000-4,500 y.a. - climates somewhat warmer and moister than today's
Since 4,500 y.a. - climates fairly similar to the present
(except; about 2600 y.a. - relatively wet/cold event (of unknown duration) in many areas)
References
cited on the QEN pages, including those cited here
Related themes:
More about
sudden transitions in the climate record
More about deducing climate history
from ice
cores
How ice sheets
keep the Earth cold during ice ages
a quick
background to the Pliocene
a Siberian
mega-lake at the Last Glacial Maximum
This document last updated 2nd
December 1997