Jökull


Jökull - 01.12.1969, Side 108

Jökull - 01.12.1969, Side 108
On Climatic Fluctuations and their Possible Causes TRAUSTI EINARSSON, DEPARTMENT OF ENGINEERING, AND SCIENCE INSTITUTE, UNIVERSITY OF ICELAND After a short summary of the last 70—100 years, and the Post-Glacial time, the main dis- cussion is devoted to the Pleistocene. To ex- clude all geologically slow causes of climatic changes, the time span considered is limited to the last 100—200 thousand years. We have then to deal with fluctuations of up to 40—50 thousand years’ durations (Dansgaard and Tauber, 1969). The grouping of the possible hypotheses follows Schwarzbach (1961) with some additions, Table I. We are here concerned with the primary causes that triggered these great climatic fluc- tuations, not with the many secondary terre- strial factors that would no doubt enter the picture. The interplay of the latter has for instance been discussed by Emiliani and Geiss (1959) and by Donn ancl Ewing (1966). For a full understanding of all main effects botli primary and secondary factor would have to be taken into account. TABLE 1 Grouþing of primary climatic hypothesis (mainly after Schwarzbach). A. TERRESTRIAL CAUSES 1. Changes of continents; extension, eleva- tion, mountain ranges. 2. The ocean. a. Changes of extension or cur- rents. b. Changes in salinity. c. Variable amount of dissolved COo as a cause of 4, d. 3. Volcanic causes. Heat given off or ash in the air. 4. The atmosphere. a. Self-regulated circula- tion changes in the troposphere or in the stratosphere. b. Changes of average cloud cover. c. Changes in average humidity. d. Changes of the CO2- content. e. Influence of a variable magnetic field on the state 104 JÖKULL 19. ÁR in the stratosphere or in the uppermost troposphere. 5. Pole wandering or continental drift. B. CHANGES OF THE EARTH’S ORBIT AND THE AXIS OF ROTATION 1. Calculable changes (the Milankowitch hypothesis). 2. Unknown changes. C. SOLAR AND COSMIC CAUSES 1. Changes of the solar constant. Sunspots. 2. Traversing of the solar system through interstellar clouds. The hypotheses A-l, 3, 5 are rejected. B-1 is rejected on the following grouncls. The aver- age of the March and September temperature for cold climate regions (Miller, 1959, Table of 35 representative stations, pp. 238—39) is 0.1° C above the annual average (2.4° C), and the average for January and July is 0.2° C above the annual mean. These facts are interpretecl to show that, first, the annual mean is prac- tically independent of a 23.5° inclination of the axis and, second, that on the average the annual heat curve is so symmetric that what for reasons of the three astronomical factors is gained in the northern summer, will be lost in winter. The very small fluctuations in these factors, on which the B-1 hypothesis is based, cannot, therefore, be assumed to have any re- motely significant climatic influence. Broecker (1966) assumes two different (self-regulated) states of the atmosphere, glacial and intergla- cial, on which the three astronomical factors should have a modulating effect. But it is argu- ed in the present paper that postulates of such different states, each dominating for a very long time, are unacceptable for the fact that the superposed annual fluctuation is one to two
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