May/June 2004 Living Now
How Global Warming May Cause the Next Ice Age
by Thom Hartmann
While global warming is being officially ignored by the political arm of the
Bush administration, and Al Gore's recent conference on the topic during one of
the coldest days of recent years provided joke fodder for conservative talk show
hosts, the citizens of Europe and the Pentagon are taking a new look at the
greatest danger such climate change could produce for the northern hemisphere -
a sudden shift into a new ice age. What they're finding is not at all
comforting.
In quick summary, if enough cold, fresh water coming from the melting polar
ice caps and the melting glaciers of Greenland flows into the northern Atlantic,
it will shut down the Gulf Stream, which keeps Europe and northeastern North
America warm. The worst-case scenario would be a full-blown return of the last
ice age - in a period as short as 2 to 3 years from its onset - and the mid-case
scenario would be a period like the "little ice age" of a few
centuries ago that disrupted worldwide weather patterns leading to extremely
harsh winters, droughts, worldwide desertification, crop failures, and wars
around the world.
Here's how it works.
If you look at a globe, you'll see that the latitude of much of Europe and
Scandinavia is the same as that of Alaska and permafrost-locked parts of
northern Canada and central Siberia. Yet Europe has a climate more similar to
that of the United States than northern Canada or Siberia. Why?
It turns out that our warmth is the result of ocean currents that bring warm
surface water up from the equator into northern regions that would otherwise be
so cold that even in summer they'd be covered with ice. The current of greatest
concern is often referred to as "The Great Conveyor Belt," which
includes what we call the Gulf Stream.
The Great Conveyor Belt, while shaped by the Coriolis Effect of the Earth's
rotation, is mostly driven by the greater force created by differences in water
temperatures and salinity. The North Atlantic Ocean is saltier and colder than
the Pacific, the result of it being so much smaller and locked into place by the
Northern and Southern American Hemispheres on the west and Europe and Africa on
the east.
As a result, the warm water of the Great Conveyor Belt evaporates out of the
North Atlantic leaving behind saltier waters, and the cold continental winds off
the northern parts of North America cool the waters. Salty, cool waters settle
to the bottom of the sea, most at a point a few hundred kilometers south of the
southern tip of Greenland, producing a whirlpool of falling water that's 5 to 10
miles across. While the whirlpool rarely breaks the surface, during certain
times of year it does produce an indentation and current in the ocean that can
tilt ships and be seen from space (and may be what we see on the maps of ancient
mariners).
This falling column of cold, salt-laden water pours itself to the bottom of
the Atlantic, where it forms an undersea river forty times larger than all the
rivers on land combined, flowing south down to and around the southern tip of
Africa, where it finally reaches the Pacific. Amazingly, the water is so deep
and so dense (because of its cold and salinity) that it often doesn't surface in
the Pacific for as much as a thousand years after it first sank in the North
Atlantic off the coast of Greenland.
The out-flowing undersea river of cold, salty water makes the level of the
Atlantic slightly lower than that of the Pacific, drawing in a strong surface
current of warm, fresher water from the Pacific to replace the outflow of the
undersea river. This warmer, fresher water slides up through the South Atlantic,
loops around North America where it's known as the Gulf Stream, and ends up off
the coast of Europe. By the time it arrives near Greenland, it's cooled off and
evaporated enough water to become cold and salty and sink to the ocean floor,
providing a continuous feed for that deep-sea river flowing to the Pacific.
These two flows - warm, fresher water in from the Pacific, which then grows
salty and cools and sinks to form an exiting deep sea river - are known as the
Great Conveyor Belt.
Amazingly, the Great Conveyor Belt is only thing between comfortable summers
and a permanent ice age for Europe and the eastern coast of North America.
Much of this science was unknown as recently as twenty years ago. Then an
international group of scientists went to Greenland and used newly developed
drilling and sensing equipment to drill into some of the world's most ancient
accessible glaciers. Their instruments were so sensitive that when they analyzed
the ice core samples they brought up, they were able to look at individual years
of snow. The results were shocking.
Prior to the last decades, it was thought that the periods between
glaciations and warmer times in North America, Europe, and North Asia were
gradual. We knew from the fossil record that the Great Ice Age period began a
few million years ago, and during those years there were times where for
hundreds or thousands of years North America, Europe, and Siberia were covered
with thick sheets of ice year-round. In between these icy times, there were
periods when the glaciers thawed, bare land was exposed, forests grew, and land
animals (including early humans) moved into these northern regions.
Most scientists figured the transition time from icy to warm was gradual,
lasting dozens to hundreds of years, and nobody was sure exactly what had caused
it. (Variations in solar radiation were suspected, as were volcanic activity,
along with early theories about the Great Conveyor Belt, which, until recently,
was a poorly understood phenomenon.)
Looking at the ice cores, however, scientists were shocked to discover that
the transitions from ice age-like weather to contemporary-type weather usually
took only two or three years. Something was flipping the weather of the planet
back and forth with a rapidity that was startling.
It turns out that the ice age versus temperate weather patterns weren't part
of a smooth and linear process, like a dimmer slider for an overhead light bulb.
They are part of a delicately balanced teeter-totter, which can exist in one
state or the other, but transits through the middle stage almost overnight. They
more resemble a light switch, which is off as you gradually and slowly lift it,
until it hits a mid-point threshold or "breakover point" where
suddenly the state is flipped from off to on and the light comes on.
It appears that small (less that .1 percent) variations in solar energy
happen in roughly 1500-year cycles. This cycle, for example, is what brought us
the "Little Ice Age" that started around the year 1400 and
dramatically cooled North America and Europe (we're now in the warming phase,
recovering from that). When the ice in the Arctic Ocean is frozen solid and
locked up, and the glaciers on Greenland are relatively stable, this variation
warms and cools the Earth in a very small way, but doesn't affect the operation
of the Great Conveyor Belt that brings moderating warm water into the North
Atlantic.
In millennia past, however, before the Arctic totally froze and locked up,
and before some critical threshold amount of fresh water was locked up in the
Greenland and other glaciers, these 1500-year variations in solar energy didn't
just slightly warm up or cool down the weather for the landmasses bracketing the
North Atlantic. They flipped on and off periods of total glaciation and periods
of temperate weather.
And these changes came suddenly.
For early humans living in Europe 30,000 years ago - when the cave paintings
in France were produced - the weather would be pretty much like it is today for
well over a thousand years, giving people a chance to build culture to the point
where they could produce art and reach across large territories.
And then a particularly hard winter would hit.
The spring would come late, and summer would never seem to really arrive,
with the winter snows appearing as early as September. The next winter would be
brutally cold, and the next spring didn't happen at all, with above-freezing
temperatures only being reached for a few days during August and the snow never
completely melting. After that, the summer never returned: for 1500 years the
snow simply accumulated and accumulated, deeper and deeper, as the continent
came to be covered with glaciers and humans either fled or died out.
(Neanderthals, who dominated Europe until the end of these cycles, appear to
have been better adapted to cold weather than Homo sapiens.)
What brought on this sudden "disappearance of summer" period was
that the warm-water currents of the Great Conveyor Belt had shut down. Once the
Gulf Stream was no longer flowing, it only took a year or three for the last of
the residual heat held in the North Atlantic Ocean to dissipate into the air
over Europe, and then there was no more warmth to moderate the northern
latitudes. When the summer stopped in the north, the rains stopped around the
equator: At the same time Europe was plunged into an Ice Age, the Middle East
and Africa were ravaged by drought and wind-driven firestorms. .
If the Great Conveyor Belt, which includes the Gulf Stream, were to stop
flowing today, the result would be sudden and dramatic. Winter would set in for
the eastern half of North America and all of Europe and Siberia, and never go
away. Within three years, those regions would become uninhabitable and nearly
two billion humans would starve, freeze to death, or have to relocate.
Civilization as we know it probably couldn't withstand the impact of such a
crushing blow.
And, incredibly, the Great Conveyor Belt has hesitated a few times in the
past decade. As William H. Calvin points out in one of the best books available
on this topic ("A Brain For All Seasons: human evolution & abrupt
climate change"): ".the abrupt cooling in the last warm period shows
that a flip can occur in situations much like the present one. What could
possibly halt the salt-conveyor belt that brings tropical heat so much farther
north and limits the formation of ice sheets? Oceanographers are busy studying
present-day failures of annual flushing, which give some perspective on the
catastrophic failures of the past. "In the Labrador Sea, flushing failed
during the 1970s, was strong again by 1990, and is now declining. In the
Greenland Sea over the 1980s salt sinking declined by 80 percent. Obviously,
local failures can occur without catastrophe - it's a question of how often and
how widespread the failures are - but the present state of decline is not very
reassuring."
Most scientists involved in research on this topic agree that the culprit is
global warming, melting the icebergs on Greenland and the Arctic icepack and
thus flushing cold, fresh water down into the Greenland Sea from the north. When
a critical threshold is reached, the climate will suddenly switch to an ice age
that could last minimally 700 or so years, and maximally over 100,000 years.
And when might that threshold be reached? Nobody knows - the action of the
Great Conveyor Belt in defining ice ages was discovered only in the last decade.
Preliminary computer models and scientists willing to speculate suggest the
switch could flip as early as next year, or it may be generations from now. It
may be wobbling right now, producing the extremes of weather we've seen in the
past few years.
What's almost certain is that if nothing is done about global warming, it
will happen sooner rather than later.
This article was adapted from the new, updated edition of "The
Last Hours of Ancient Sunlight" by Thom Hartmann (thom@thomhartmann.com),
due out from Random House/Three Rivers Press in March. Reprinted with
permission. www.thomhartmann.com