Understanding climate
for the benefit of society

Seminar: Northern Hemisphere Control over Antarctic Glaciation in the Warm Pliocene Epoch

Tim Herbert is a marine geologist and paleoclimatologist interested the ocean's role in ice age cycles.  After obtaining his Ph.D. at Princeton University, he has held faculty positions at Scripps Institution of Oceanography and Brown University. His laboratory is a world leader in generating time series of past ocean temperatures based on biomarker analyses i marine sediments.
 

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Timothy Herbert

Abstract:

The earth’s climate system has gone through major changes over time that serve as natural experiments to test our understanding of linkages and feedbacks that may come into play if the Earth continues to warm, as expected from greenhouse gas forcing.  Our project investigates patterns of climate change between the northern and southern hemispheres during the mid-Pliocene epoch (~3-4 Myr ago) when the overall climate state was warmer than today. Critically, evidence suggests that the amount of ice on Antarctica was similar to today, but that there was little or no permanent ice on land in the northern hemisphere.  Most climate scientists have therefore supposed that climate change would focus on the region around the Antarctic.  I will present an interpretation based on new data that, contrary to this view, change initiated in the northern hemisphere propagated all the way southward, and actually determined the timing and amount of temperature change globally.  The most likely mechanism would link changes in the high latitude North Atlantic to atmospheric CO2 levels, thereby determining ice volume in the southern hemisphere.

 

Arranged date for the seminar talk: Jun 12, 2017