homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Trigger for Earth's last 'big freeze' located by geoscientists

Some 12,900 years ago, a massive flood of melted freshwater in the Arctic caused a 1,200-year-long chill nicknamed the “Big Freeze.” During this time much of the Northern Hemisphere was engulfed by centuries of cold, which caused the extinction of most great mammals, like mammoths, as well as the Clovis people. For decades, scientists have […]

Tibi Puiu
November 6, 2012 @ 10:48 am

share Share

Some 12,900 years ago, a massive flood of melted freshwater in the Arctic caused a 1,200-year-long chill nicknamed the “Big Freeze.” During this time much of the Northern Hemisphere was engulfed by centuries of cold, which caused the extinction of most great mammals, like mammoths, as well as the Clovis people. For decades, scientists have been debating from where and how did the freshwater flood flow. Now, a team of scientists may have finally reached a conclusion after they devised a computer model.

Technically known as the Younger Dryas, this specific period wasn’t a glacial period or what’s commonly referred to as an “ice age”, since it was a cold time in an otherwise warm span between ice ages. In other words, the Big Freeze wasn’t part of the Earth’s natural warm/cold cycle, it was triggered by an event. Previous theories held that a cosmic impact caused the Big Freeze, however recently scientist have reached to a common conclusion that a vast pulse of freshwater is to blame.

A new model of flood waters from melting of the Laurentide Ice Sheet and large glacial lakes along its edge that covered much of North America from the Arctic south to New England over 13,000 years ago, shows the meltwater flowed northwest into the Arctic first. This weakened deep ocean circulation and led to Earth’s last major cold period.The direction of meltwater drainage is shown by the yellow arrows. The approximate position of the ice sheet is shown (in white) just before the onset of the Younger Dryas. The ocean colors are surface salinity from the control integration with warm (cold) surface currents shown in red (blue). (c) Alan Condron, UMass Amhers

A new model of flood waters from melting of the Laurentide Ice Sheet and large glacial lakes along its edge that covered much of North America from the Arctic south to New England over 13,000 years ago, shows the meltwater flowed northwest into the Arctic first. This weakened deep ocean circulation and led to Earth’s last major cold period.The direction of meltwater drainage is shown by the yellow arrows. The approximate position of the ice sheet is shown (in white) just before the onset of the Younger Dryas. The ocean colors are surface salinity from the control integration with warm (cold) surface currents shown in red (blue). (c) Alan Condron, UMass Amhers

The source of this great flood was the massive glacial Lake Agassiz, located along the southern margin of the Laurentide Ice Sheet, which at its maximum 21,000 years ago was 6,500 to 9,800 feet (2,000 to 3,000 meters) thick and covered much of North America, from the Arctic Ocean south to Seattle and New York. Researchers believe the flood was caused by a sudden melting of an ice dam. The subsequent massive influx of freshwater diluted the circulation of saltwater in the North Atlantic, disrupting the ocean “conveyer belt” that transports heat to Europe and North America. The weakening of this circulation caused by the flood resulted in the dramatic cooling of North America and Europe.

Until recently, however, scientists weren’t sure whether the meltwater flowed northwest into the Arctic first, or east via the Gulf of St. Lawrence.

“This episode was the last time the Earth underwent a major cooling, so understanding exactly what caused it is very important for understanding how our modern-day climate might change in the future,” says Condron of UMass Amherst’s Climate System Research Center

Working with Peter Winsor at the University of Alaska, Condron used a high resolution, global, ocean-ice circulation model that is 10 to 20 times more powerful than previously attainable, to compare how different drainage outlets was delivered to the sinking regions in the North Atlantic. If Lake Aggasiz drained into the North Atlantic down the St. Lawrence River then the thermohaline circulation would have weakened by less than 15 percent. In contrast, when the meltwater first drains into the Arctic Ocean, narrow coastal boundary currents can efficiently deliver it to the deep water formation regions of the sub-polar north Atlantic, weakening the thermohaline circulation by more than 30 percent.

These findings hint that shifts in the flow of water in the Arctic could dramatically alter today’s climate.

“However, in our modern-day climate, there are no sources of freshwater as large as the glacial lakes or Laurentide Ice Sheet readily available to suddenly flood into the ocean,” Condron said. “As a result, we should be cautious using this study as an analog for what might trigger modern-day abrupt climate change.”

The researchers are able, however, to put their model to good use in other instances, though far less extreme, like studying the effects of the potential melting of large ice sheet over Greenland and changes in the hydrological cycle, such as increased river runoff of the Arctic in the near-future.

Findings were published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Source: University of Massachusetts at Amherst

share Share

Over 70% of the world's aquifers could be tainted by 2100

Over 2.5 billion people depend on aquifers for fresh water, but rising seas and climate change are pushing saltwater into these crucial reserves.

AI Uncovers Thousands of Abandoned Oil Wells Hidden in Old Maps

Combing through old maps, this AI finds abandoned oil wells so we can cut off their methane emissions.

Google's DeepMind claims they have the best weather prediction model

After chess, Go, and proteins, has DeepMind taken over weather forecasting as well?

First Ice-Free Day in the Arctic Could Happen by 2027, Study Warns

Climate change is heating up faster than we thought.

Even ExxonMobil is telling Trump to tone it down on fossil fuels

Even ExxonMobil, a symbol of fossil fuel dominance, is urging climate action, underscoring the tension between Trump’s policies and industry realities.

The explosive secret behind the squirting cucumber is finally out

Scientists finally decode the secret mechanism that has been driving the peculiar seed dispersion action of squirting cucumber.

NASA accidentally rediscovers forgotten doomsday Cold War base in Greenland

The ambitious and top secret project was supposed to withstand a first strike by the Soviet Union, but it ultimately couldn't withstand nature's cold embrace.

Big oil and chemical companies teamed up to "end plastic waste". They produced 1,000 times more than they cleaned up

"The Alliance to End Plastic Waste promised a $1.5 billion solution to plastic pollution. Five years later, it’s cleaned up less plastic than its members produce in two days.

Fiji is already relocating villages because of climate change

Dozens of villages have to move or be destroyed.

What Musk and Rogan Got Very Wrong About Climate Change and Meat

In a recent podcast appearance, Musk spread climate misinformation.