Marine Isotope Stage 19: analogue for the present interglacial

Lead Research Organisation: University College London
Department Name: Geography

Abstract

Past interglacials characterized by an orbital geometry similar to the current interglacial (Holocene) provide a basis for assessing the natural evolution of different components of the climate system and the extent of anthropogenic interference during recent millennia. While human modification of vegetation and landscapes has been underway throughout the Holocene, arguably the most significant interference with global environments has been the onset of anthropogenic emissions of greenhouse gases (GHG) over the past two centuries. However, in his 'early anthropogenic hypothesis', Ruddiman (2003) proposed that humans began modifying greenhouse gas concentrations thousands of years before the industrial era, with forest clearance and intensification of rice agriculture leading to increases in atmospheric CO2 and CH4 levels, respectively. More specifically, the concentrations of these gases show early Holocene peaks followed by declines, but the downward trend was reversed after 8 and 5 thousand years ago for CO2 and CH4, respectively. By drawing analogies with natural trends in the previous four interglacials, Ruddiman suggested that the Holocene evolution of GHG concentrations was anomalous, but differences in orbital configurations and uncertainties over their precise synchronization have underlined the limitations of such comparisons.
More recently, the period around 780 thousand years ago, known as Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 19 has been identified as the closest analogue to the current interglacial on the basis of the phasing of orbital parameters and overall climate evolution. As such, it provides a more appropriate testbed for evaluating the Holocene evolution of GHG and vegetation succession. However, despite this potential, MIS 19 remains substantially understudied.
The proposed project aims to address this imbalance by generating the most detailed record (~200-yr resolution) of vegetation and hydrological changes during MIS 19 from ODP Site 977 in the Alboran Sea, S Iberian margin and combine it with ongoing analyses of palaeoceanographic proxies from the same samples, currently underway by the Spanish Consortium GRACCIE. In recent years, the western and southern parts of the Iberian margin have emerged as critical areas for linking marine and terrestrial records directly through joint pollen and palaeoceanographic proxy analyses in the same marine archive recovered adjacent to the continent. This allows a direct comparison between ocean and terrestrial changes, bypassing timescale and correlation uncertainties. The results will establish:

(1) the duration of the MIS 19 interglacial in sea surface conditions and the precise phasing with vegetation changes;
(2) Vegetation trends during MIS 19 vis-à-vis those already observed in the region during the Holocene;
(3) the nature of vegetation and hydrological changes during the peak in atmospheric methane concentrations at the end of MIS 19c;
(4) the response of vegetation and impact on erosion to short-term climate variability during the intervals before and after the interglacial as well as within it.

If the MIS 19 - MIS 1 analogy is correct, these results will have implications for assessing: (i) the natural length of the current interglacial, in the absence of anthropogenic forcing; (ii) the extent to which human impact over the past millennia has overprinted natural vegetation trends in the region; (iii) the underlying causes for the Holocene evolution of methane.

Planned Impact

Who and how will benefit from this research?
(i) IPCC and Policy makers. The aims of this research are relevant to the IPCC mission, which in turn feeds into policy decisions. More specifically, a Palaeoclimate Chapter is planned for the upcoming Fifth Assessment Report. Results of this project will be directly relevant to this because they can provide a baseline for assessing the extent of anthropogenic interference during recent millennia and can clarify our present position in the interglacial cycle.

(ii) Student community. Arguably, the main function of universities is to create new knowledge and to transmit this to the students and also to the general public (see below). The integration of the output of current research into courses can serve an important function in informing and inspiring students, provided that the intellectual background and significance of the work is properly explained. We propose to produce two professionally shot and edited short documentaries explaining the background and broader implications of the project, which will be used as teaching resources.

(iii) Wider user interest: general public and media. Climate change is a topic that is not only a concern of the scientific community but also of the public, media and policy makers. In this respect, palaeoclimate research can make an important contribution by providing insights into natural trends during intervals characterized by similar climate boundary conditions as our current interglacial.

The two short documentaries proposed in this project seek to contribute to the public engagement and will be posted on all three of the web media portals for maximum impact to the general public and the media. The PDRA and PI will collaborate with multimedia technicians and in the production of the films, gaining valuable experience in new teaching resources and the communication of science to the general public.

Finally, in collaboration with our Spanish Project Partners, we propose to present the key scientific results and broader implications of our combined research to the general public by organizing an event at the CosmoCaixa Science Museum in Barcelona. The Museum is extremely active in communicating scientific results to the public and the Spanish Project Partners and Professor Tzedakis have been involved with similar events in the Museum in the past.

Publications

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Description The period around 780 thousand years ago, known as Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 19 has been identified as the closest analogue to the current interglacial on the basis of the phasing of orbital parameters and overall climate evolution. As such, it provides a more appropriate testbed for evaluating the Holocene evolution of GHG and vegetation succession. However, despite this potential, MIS 19 remains substantially understudied. The proposed project aims to address this imbalance by generating the most detailed record (~200-yr resolution) of vegetation and hydrological changes during MIS 19 from ODP Site 977 in the Alboran Sea, S Iberian margin and combine it with ongoing analyses of palaeoceanographic proxies from the same samples, currently underway by the Spanish Consortium GRACCIE. In recent years, the western and southern parts of the Iberian margin have emerged as critical areas for linking marine and terrestrial records directly through joint pollen and palaeoceanographic proxy analyses in the same marine archive recovered adjacent to the continent. This allows a direct comparison between ocean and terrestrial changes, bypassing timescale and correlation uncertainties.

The specific objectives of the project are to:
1. generate a high-resolution pollen record from core ODP977 during the interval 755-795 ka;
2. generate a continuous XRF record from the same interval and increase sampling resolution for the pollen and marine proxies in specific intervals of interest;
3. to compare the results with parallel analyses of d18Oplanktonic and alkenone-based sea surface temperatures (SSTs) from the same core;
4. to compare the MIS 19 results with published Holocene trends in SSTs and vegetation.

All objectives have been met. Planktonic foraminiferal isotope analyses and sea surface temperature reconstructions have been completed and provided by the Spanish Consortium GGRACCIE. Synthesis of the results has allowed us to:
1. determine the duration of interglacial sea surface and vegetation conditions;
2. examine the nature of vegetation and hydrological changes within MIS 19c, with implications for the Holocene methane evolution.
4. establish the response of vegetation and impact on erosion to short-term climate variability during the intervals before and after the interglacial as well as within it.
Exploitation Route The generated pollen dataset will be of direct interest to palaeoecologists as it provides an insight into natural vegetation changes on orbital, millennial and sub-millennial scales. However, its expected high impact lies in its combination with sediment and marine proxy data from the same sequence in the Iberian margin. The combined datasets will be of interest to both the terrestrial and marine communities, as they will deliver better constraints on links between key parameters in the climate system. In addition, the results of this project will be of interest to the ice core community as they pertain to an evaluation of the strength of the hydrological cycle at mid-to-low latitudes, which can be useful in constraining sources of atmospheric methane.

Ultimately, the proposed project will be of interest to the wider field of global change, because it provides a baseline for assessing natural trends and the extent of anthropogenic interference during the Holocene and can clarify our present position in the interglacial cycle.
Sectors Environment

 
Description Our paper Tzedakis et al. in Nature Geoscience on the natural length of our current interglacial has been cited by the IPCC in its recent AR5
First Year Of Impact 2013
Sector Environment
 
Description Emerging MIS 19 pollen data 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Presentation of research by PDRA V. Margari at the Godwin Palaeoclimate Day, Dept of Earth Sciences, Cambridge
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2016