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Earth Science

New Study Shows Three Abrupt Pulses of CO2 During Last Deglaciation 132

vinces99 writes A new study shows that the increase of atmospheric carbon dioxide that contributed to the end of the last ice age more than 10,000 years ago did not occur gradually but rather was characterized by three abrupt pulses. Scientists are not sure what caused these abrupt increases, during which carbon dioxide levels rose about 10 to 15 parts per million – or about 5 percent per episode – during a span of one to two centuries. It likely was a combination of factors, they say, including ocean circulation, changing wind patterns and terrestrial processes. The finding, published Oct. 30 in the journal Nature, casts new light on the mechanisms that take the Earth in and out of ice ages.

"We used to think that naturally occurring changes in carbon dioxide took place relatively slowly over the 10,000 years it took to move out of the last ice age," said lead author Shaun Marcott, who did the work as a postdoctoral researcher at Oregon State University and is now at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. "This abrupt, centennial-scale variability of CO2 appears to be a fundamental part of the global carbon cycle."

Previous research has hinted at the possibility that spikes in atmospheric carbon dioxide may have accelerated the last deglaciation, but that hypothesis had not been resolved, the researchers say. The key to the new finding is the analysis of an ice core from the West Antarctic that provided the scientists with an unprecedented glimpse into the past."
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New Study Shows Three Abrupt Pulses of CO2 During Last Deglaciation

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 30, 2014 @07:05PM (#48274577)

    "However, the researchers say that no obvious ocean mechanism is known that would trigger rises of 10 to 15 ppm over a timespan as short as one to two centuries."

    We're way, way, way beyond 10 to 15 in 200 years.

    • by saloomy ( 2817221 ) on Thursday October 30, 2014 @07:52PM (#48274815)
      Sounds like they really just don't know.
      It likely was a combination of factors, they say, including ocean circulation, changing wind patterns and terrestrial processes.

      But at least they are studying and learning.
      "This abrupt, centennial-scale variability of CO2 appears to be a fundamental part of the global carbon cycle. "Previous research has hinted at the possibility that spikes in atmospheric carbon dioxide may have accelerated the last deglaciation, but that hypothesis had not been resolved, the researchers say.

      The earth has been from +14 to -6 degrees on average from where it is today. Historically speaking, were in the "colder than usual" range of the bell curve today, and thats with using ice cores to detect CO2 levels and temperature histories. Its not like we had a thermocouple hooked up to a server recording that data for millions of years. These deductions are best effort conclusions on data that only tells a very broad stroke of the story.
      What upsets me is how demonizing the argument about Global Warming / Climate Change is. The earth will change its temperature. That will happen with or without us, just look at the historical record [wikipedia.org]. Earths temperature isn't stable. And for all those who argue we are burning too much fossil fuels, those carbon atoms weren't created into existence in the ground as they were today, unless you believe the earth is 6000 years old!
      They were a part of the global carbon cycle, and buried during mass extinction events and processes that sequestered them to where they are today. It isn't science to say "for sure this and for sure that". Its science to say: "To the level of our current understanding...". Thats it. You can't know for certain, just like they didn't know for certain that the earth was the center of the universe, even though it was proselytized. Its not OK to attack the character of an individual when they are skeptical of your conclusions. All of science works better when there are those who are skeptical. It refines your proof if you are right, or betters your understanding if you are wrong.

      As for the problems associated with climate change, it will happen. For those of us living where it will flood, there will be a new continent to live on, once it unfreezes (again!).
      • Its [sic] not OK to attack the character of an individual when they are skeptical of your conclusions.

        But it's OK to attack the character of an individual when they are skeptical of the facts [slate.com].

        • What are you implying? That it's OK to attack Ken Ham, or that its OK for Ken Ham to attack people who don't believe as he does?

          Ken Ham can build whatever he wants on his own dime, in his own land. I just don't want him influencing public policy or spending public funds on projects that are not based on science.
          • by CaptainDork ( 3678879 ) on Thursday October 30, 2014 @08:57PM (#48275115)

            Science, shmience.

            Ken Ham is a crackpot, without character, on the order of Fred Phelps [godhatesfags.com].

          • Its [sic] not OK to attack the character of an individual when they are skeptical of your conclusions.

            But it's OK to attack the character of an individual when they are skeptical of the facts [slate.com].

            What are you implying? That it's OK to attack Ken Ham, or that its OK for Ken Ham to attack people who don't believe as he does?

            CaptainDork isn't implying anything. S/he says it's okay to attack the character of an individual who is skeptical of the facts, not beliefs.

            Ken Ham can build whatever he wants on his own dime, in his own land.

            Can he do that by practicing illegal discrimination? If you bothered to read the Slate article linked by CaptainDork, you'd see that Ken Ham is engaging in just that.

            I just don't want him influencing public policy or spending public funds on projects that are not based on science.

            That's the point. Again, read the Slate article linked by CaptainDork. And if you're too lazy to do that, then here you go:

            But Ark Encounter isn’t privately funded; the citizens of Kentucky have been roped into paying for it, whether they like it or not. Earlier this year, Kentucky’s Tourism Development Finance Authority gave preliminary support for $18.25 million in tax credits for Ark Encounter, citing Ham’s promise that the project would create 600 to 700 jobs. And that’s just for the first phase of construction; ultimately, the state could grant Ark Encounter up to $73 million in tax breaks.

            • CaptainDork isn't implying anything. S/he says it's okay to attack the character of an individual who is skeptical of the facts, not beliefs.

              Right but his sentence could be read another way (or so it did when I first read it).

              Can he do that by practicing illegal discrimination? If you bothered to read the Slate article linked by CaptainDork, you'd see that Ken Ham is engaging in just that.

              It is illegal, so he can't. But then, I wasn't commenting on how he builds his park, or who he hires to build it. Only whatever he wants. (so long as it passes building codes, but then again, I was really stating my principles not what is legally possible.

              That's the point. Again, read the Slate article linked by CaptainDork. And if you're too lazy to do that, then here you go:

              Thanks for that. But no, I did read the article. I just don't agree with Ken Ham spending public funds to build something based on his beliefs, and not our collective s

      • by quantaman ( 517394 ) on Thursday October 30, 2014 @09:01PM (#48275129)

        Sounds like they really just don't know.

         
          It likely was a combination of factors, they say, including ocean circulation, changing wind patterns and terrestrial processes.

        Actually they do know, they just don't know precisely.

        You're basically implying their knowledge is zero, the truth is they've already ruled out countless possibilities, they just haven't gotten all the way to the truth.


        "This abrupt, centennial-scale variability of CO2 appears to be a fundamental part of the global carbon cycle. "Previous research has hinted at the possibility that spikes in atmospheric carbon dioxide may have accelerated the last deglaciation, but that hypothesis had not been resolved, the researchers say.

        The earth has been from +14 to -6 degrees on average from where it is today. Historically speaking, were in the "colder than usual" range of the bell curve today, and thats with using ice cores to detect CO2 levels and temperature histories. Its not like we had a thermocouple hooked up to a server recording that data for millions of years. These deductions are best effort conclusions on data that only tells a very broad stroke of the story.

        Interesting but I'm not sure how it's relevant.

        What upsets me is how demonizing the argument about Global Warming / Climate Change is. The earth will change its temperature. That will happen with or without us, just look at the historical record [wikipedia.org]. Earths temperature isn't stable.

        You're arguing a strawman, no one has ever argued that climate is completely stable without us. The claim is that we're undergoing an extreme and dangerous rate of change due to human causes.

        And for all those who argue we are burning too much fossil fuels, those carbon atoms weren't created into existence in the ground as they were today, unless you believe the earth is 6000 years old!

        Ahh, I get it.

        AGW deniers are often associated with Young Earth Creationists (YECs) because the religious right and YECs are fairly well represented in the AGW denier community. Therefore you compare AGW proponents to YECs, and if any show outrage at the comparison you can say they're hypocritical because of how people associate YECs with denialists.

        They were a part of the global carbon cycle, and buried during mass extinction events and processes that sequestered them to where they are today. It isn't science to say "for sure this and for sure that". Its science to say: "To the level of our current understanding...". Thats it. You can't know for certain, just like they didn't know for certain that the earth was the center of the universe, even though it was proselytized. Its not OK to attack the character of an individual when they are skeptical of your conclusions. All of science works better when there are those who are skeptical. It refines your proof if you are right, or betters your understanding if you are wrong.

          As for the problems associated with climate change, it will happen. For those of us living where it will flood, there will be a new continent to live on, once it unfreezes (again!).

        And again I'm not sure what the point of this section was other than to accuse the researchers of not doing science... and then promptly follow that up with a deliciously ironic complaint that people shouldn't "attack the character of an individual when they are skeptical of your conclusions".

      • by crioca ( 1394491 )

        And for all those who argue we are burning too much fossil fuels, those carbon atoms weren't created into existence in the ground as they were today, unless you believe the earth is 6000 years old!

        Okay, I don't think you understand the issues that climate change presents; for the Earth to sustain a healthy biosphere with 7+ billion humans we've had to develop a lot of infrastructure to make effective use of it's resources. Changes in the climate will require us to devote resources to re-configuring our infrastructure, the faster it happens, the more resources we'll need to devote, which will impact living standards. We do not know exactly how high the cost will be, but we do know that it will be che

        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by radtea ( 464814 )

          We do not know exactly how high the cost will be, but we do know that it will be cheaper if we act now.

          Absolutely. The difficulty is that "action" has to get past a fence of anti-science, anti-technology, anti-capitalist nutjobs who say on the one hand that a) we face a civilization-ending event and b) we must not use various well-known and ready-to-go solutions to the problem, but instead must embark on an unproven revolutionary program that "changes everything!"

          Nuclear power, carbon taxes, and research in to carbon sequestration are the obvious immediate responses to climate change.

          The first two are practi

          • by Anonymous Coward

            "righties bombing the brown people" I didn't know Obama was a rightie.

          • Instead we have left-wing idiots protesting oil pipelines, because that's where the donation dollars come from.

            so just to be clear, you are in favor of oil pipelines? which commit a valdez or a deepwater every so many days or so?

          • "Carbon sequestration". Yeah, the problem we have is all this carbon we are digging up and burning is causing trouble so we need to find a way of sequestering it after we burn it. Do you see the stupid part in this plan?
          • "We can tax income, or we can tax carbon emissions."

            How much you wanna bet we end up with both, plus a value-added tax on top just for good measure?
        • We do not know exactly how high the cost will be, but we do know that it will be cheaper if we act now.

          True enough. And yet we take most of the available courses of action off the table.

          The Earth's climate will change, and would even if we weren't here. But we are here, and we have reasons we don't want it to change, so we need to start learning to actively manage the planet's climate. This includes not just reducing our impact on it, but figuring out how to modify and regulate it. Reducing greenhouse gas emissions is well and good, but why are we not investing in more proactive measures? For that matter,

          • I agree, but people have been working on ideas for changing the planetary climates independent of carbon sequestration or lack thereof. It would be real useful to be able to stabilize it at some point well suited for the current human civilization.

            • I agree, but people have been working on ideas for changing the planetary climates independent of carbon sequestration or lack thereof.

              Ideas, yes, but AFAICT no one is talking even remotely seriously about implementing any of them. It may be that implementation is premature, of course, that the ideas aren't sufficiently well-developed and tested, but I think we should at least be talking about the ideas in public fora.

              It would be real useful to be able to stabilize it at some point well suited for the current human civilization.

              Exactly. Though "stabilize" is the wrong word, I think, because I doubt it will ever be "stable". Instead, what we should be able to someday achieve is a sort of dynamic stability, via active management, so whenever it starts

      • Historically speaking, were in the "colder than usual" range of the bell curve today, and thats with using ice cores to detect CO2 levels and temperature histories.

        *sigh*

        Using ice cores, we're much warmer than usual [wikipedia.org].

        Earths temperature isn't stable.

        So we should warm the earth much faster than it warms naturally, and upwards from the top of an interglacial when all the existent species on the planet, plus all our infrastructure have never co-existed with the new temperature?

        Surely we can do a bit better than "Earth's temperature isn't stable, so everything might be all right". Why don't we use that science thing that has been so good for our species? We can look at what will happen to which specie

        • *sigh*

          Using ice cores, we're much warmer than usual [wikipedia.org].

          The Earth is only 400 thousand years old?

          • Using ice cores, we're much warmer than usual.

            The Earth is only 400 thousand years old?

            Humanity has been around for how much longer than 400 thousand years?

          • The Earth is only 400 thousand years old?

            No, the Earth is over 4.5 billion years old.

            • That's what I thought, but the link he gives only shows a 400,000 year window.

              • That's what I thought, but the link he gives only shows a 400,000 year window.

                The link to the ice-core temperature reconstruction data from the Vostok Ice cores?

                They only go back 400,000 years. EPICA cores go back a bit further.

                • And your point?

                  • Saloomy's claim [slashdot.org] was:

                    Historically speaking, were in the "colder than usual" range of the bell curve today, and thats with using ice cores to detect CO2 levels and temperature histories.

                    This is not true, using the data set [s]he mentions. We're much warmer than normal, according to the ice core record.

                    This is not, as you seem to have been suggesting that the Earth is less than a million years old, but that Ice Cores don't go back further than that.

                    • LMAO wow, the point went completely over your head. If you think this: "The Earth is only 400 thousand years old?" is equivalent to suggesting what you say...wow, just wow...Particularly after this, "That's what I thought, but the link [you give] only shows a 400,000 year window."

                      No the point is, excusing the boshe ice core citation and the bell curve comment (wth does that have to do with anything), we are colder than it has been historically.

                      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F... [wikipedia.org]

                      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F [wikipedia.org]

      • by chmod a+x mojo ( 965286 ) on Thursday October 30, 2014 @11:53PM (#48275739)

        And for all those who argue we are burning too much fossil fuels, those carbon atoms weren't created into existence in the ground as they were today, unless you believe the earth is 6000 years old!
        They were a part of the global carbon cycle, and buried during mass extinction events and processes that sequestered them to where they are today.

        Ummm, close, but no. It was sequestered over hundreds of million years to billions of years but the bulk of the carbon from the carbon cycle is tied up in a few places, neither of which has anything to do with mass extinctions. The huge bulk of CO2 ( currently ~400PPM atmosphere, ~60*atmosphere dissolved in the oceans, and ~10,000*oceans+atmosphere is tied up in rocks ) is tied up in the carbonates, I.E. limestones and dolostones. Coals come from swamps, and oil comes from mostly shallow-ish marine bacteria that had periodic blooms and die-offs that settled into the sediments on the seafloor and got buried.

      • What upsets me is how demonizing the argument about Global Warming / Climate Change is

        Well, I suspect that somebody has an interest in derailing the discussion and avoiding a proper, level-headed, scientific discourse. The blame falls on both sides, but I don't think those involved in climate research are at fault; they do, after all, come out at regular intervals with corrections and amendments to their previous work, something we don't see much of from the other side.

        The earth will change its temperature. That will happen with or without us, just look at the historical record. Earths temperature isn't stable.

        This is well known and has been for more than a century. What is new is that we are contributing significantly to the warmin

      • The variation of planetary surface temperature over the past billion years really isn't relevant here, or the fact that those carbon atoms (created in supernovas a long time ago, I believe) weren't buried several hundred million years ago. We're looking at unprecedentedly high temperatures for the time humans have been on this planet, and this is caused largely by taking carbon out of the ground where it's been since long before humans were around and putting it in the atmosphere. I really don't care if

    • That's about when the Igigi created mankind. How about that?

    • Having read in the past that although plants normally absorb CO2 while living, they tend to re-release most-to-all of it in death, the first thing that comes to mind for me is... what if global conditions were such that a mass-kill-off of plants occurred from the freeze... seems like that could effectively release quite a bit of CO2, and in quite a hurry, no? Like an advancing cold front year after year until the balance shifted the opposite direction...
  • by laing ( 303349 ) on Thursday October 30, 2014 @07:07PM (#48274587)
    How do we know the CO2 spikes caused the warming? Perhaps the CO2 resulted from increased biological activity occuring as a result of the warming.

    This [wikipedia.org] sort of confusion happens a lot in science.

    • No, it almost never happens in science. That error is typically a symptom of pseudoscience.

      • by DiamondGeezer ( 872237 ) on Thursday October 30, 2014 @07:33PM (#48274709) Homepage

        It happens a lot in science. Have you actually read "The Structure of Scientific Revolutions"? Clearly not.

      • by Crashmarik ( 635988 ) on Thursday October 30, 2014 @08:48PM (#48275081)

        Hows that luminous aether working out for you ?
        http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L... [wikipedia.org]

        Little dated ? Maybe supersymetry and string theory ?
        http://scienceblogs.com/starts... [scienceblogs.com]

        Magnetic Monopoles ?
        http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M... [wikipedia.org]

        Science is about being aware of what you don't understand and just how vast it is. Pseudoscience is about certainty. Maybe you can get a corrective phrenology session to clear that up ?

        • by crioca ( 1394491 )
          Isaac Asimov's essay, "The Relativity of Wrong"does a wonderful job of revealing the foolishness of this type of thinking. http://chem.tufts.edu/answersi... [tufts.edu]
          • I met the good doctor back in 1974 at a bookstore on 71st street in Miami Beach*. He really was an incredible wit and raconteur, there is no way I am going to go up against his ability to formulate a plausible explanation. I mean really how can you dispute someone who could come up with the ancient Greeks prophesying Einstein ? http://geobeck.tripod.com/fron... [tripod.com]

            But he should have known better in the essay you linked just the same. A well educated person in the 1700s could have made the same claim that it was

            • I don't think you understood Asimov's point. He wasn't claiming that we understand everything, or anything close to it. He was claiming that we understand a lot more than we used to in response to a claim that, essentially, all ignorance is equal. Science today is wrong. Absolutely. But it's much less wrong than it was a few decades ago, and will be less wrong a few decades hence than it is now.

              when you spoke of climate change you were likely to be as worried about the next glaciation as warming.

              Actually, we should be as worried about the next glaciation as warming or perhaps more worried, because glaciation

              • Sorry the way I read Asimov's essay was you had people talking past each other. Just to put this in perspective Newtonian mechanics is a radically different view of the world than relativistic mechanics yet is still overwhelmingly used to do almost all calculations in engineering. I suspect the same will hold true whenever a viable formulation of quantum gravity is made.

                Maybe a better way to examine this would be to look at the implications of saying "I am glad we live in a time when we finally understand

                • Just to put this in perspective Newtonian mechanics is a radically different view of the world than relativistic mechanics yet is still overwhelmingly used to do almost all calculations in engineering.

                  This is exactly Asimov's point, though he doesn't use this example. He argues that at any given time science's view of the world isn't so much wrong as it is incomplete. That's definitely the relationship between classical and relativistic mechanics; they have radically different explanations, but the latter implies the former and clarifies under what circumstances the classical computations are correct and to what degree. He uses the example of flat vs spherical vs oblate spheroid conceptions of the shape

                  • I think you may be missing the difference between the what and the how. The what is observational data, any new scientific theory either has to be consistent with existing observational data or show that the observations are in error. As an example any new theory of gravitation has to accurately predict the observed orbits of the planets or it will be rejected. It can however have a radically different basis for what makes them have those orbits.

                    • Sure, there's a difference between the explanation and the predictions. Perhaps we're just disagreeing on whether a new explanation that better fits predictions to observations makes the new theory "right" and the old one "wrong", or whether it's just an increase in completeness. There's a rational basis for both positions. I prefer the latter (as did Asimov in his essay) for several reasons, not least because it doesn't imply that the new theory is "right".

                      I recognize there's a danger in the "increasing

    • So in that scenario what happened to the warming that should have happened because of increased CO2 (CO2 being a greenhouse gas and all)?
    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 30, 2014 @07:25PM (#48274675)

      " Perhaps the CO2 resulted from increased biological activity occuring as a result of the warming"

      A simpler explanation is Henry's law: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry's_law

      "carbon dioxide from a carbonated drink escapes much faster when the drink is not cooled "

      Likewise, carbon dioxide from a carbonated ocean escapes when the ocean warms.

    • by Layzej ( 1976930 ) on Thursday October 30, 2014 @07:35PM (#48274725)

      How do we know the CO2 spikes caused the warming? Perhaps the CO2 resulted from increased biological activity occuring as a result of the warming.

      I would think increased biological activity would have sequestered CO2 rather than released it, but you could be right that the CO2 was a result of the warming. At the same time, we know that CO2 is a greenhouse gas, so (all else being equal) increased CO2 would result in higher temperatures. That's just physics. So possibly there is a feedback loop here.

    • What causation? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Namarrgon ( 105036 ) on Thursday October 30, 2014 @08:05PM (#48274875) Homepage

      Who said the CO2 causes anything?

      The article and summary use the words "contributed to", which we know will be true - as a greenhouse gas, any increased CO2 will amplify and contribute to further warming. Doubtless there are other causative factors involved (e.g. Milankovitch cycles), some of which may well have occurred before the CO2 release.

      The interesting question is, what triggered the CO2 pulses?

    • by crioca ( 1394491 )

      How do we know the CO2 spikes caused the warming?

      Because of 1. the greenhouse effect and 2. climate forcing.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Truth_Quark ( 219407 )
      While correlation doesn't in statistics imply causation, in this case we do have an understanding of the physics of the causal mechanism.

      It's called the greenhouse effect [wikipedia.org].

      I'm surprised you haven't heard of it.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Settled I say (in Foghorn J. Leghorn's voice)

  • Perhaps some kind of large reserves of stuff were the final nail in the coffin? Don't we have several mammoth cO2 reserves around the planet, right on the verge of finally letting go?

  • last glacial (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Black Parrot ( 19622 ) on Thursday October 30, 2014 @07:22PM (#48274653)

    We're in an interglacial, still in same ice age.

  • Nostradamus (Score:1, Troll)

    by ultranova ( 717540 )

    This proves global warming causes carbon dioxide, not the other way around! It's all a conspiracy by those rich and powerful scientists and tree huggers against poor widdle oil tycoons!

    So, Republicans, does this about sum it up?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Not sure why you are bashing Republicans on a story that shows Democrats have been wrong.

      • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

        How about we give points to both sides:

        Points to GOP: The Earth's temperature is volatile such that man-made changes to it are not really anything new or unique*.

        Points to Dems: Increases in CO2 provably cause the temperature to rise.

        * Sub-counter-point: The changes will f$ck over human society either way.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          Lookie, another DNC is completely wrong so we have to post "both are equally bad" when it was just shown one side has been lying all along and the other wasn't.

          CO2 hasn't proven to increase temperatures. Remember that "hockey stick" graph. The only part of that we haven't seen is the increase in temperature. So you stick to the only part of the claim that isn't true by stating that it is true. You must be some kind of truth denier or something.

          • CO2 hasn't proven to increase temperatures.

            The greenhouse effect?

            Remember that "hockey stick" graph. The only part of that we haven't seen is the increase in temperature.

            Some of these ones [realclimate.org]? It looks like an increase to me.

          • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

            by Anonymous Coward

            No, it really has. You can do tabletop lab tests to confirm it. Earth only has one way to transfer energy to space, that makes it reaaaally fucking simple to work out the radiative transfer equations. A doubling of atmospheric carbon will provably, with utter certainty, result in ~3.7W/m^2 additional warming, commonly cited as 1 degree C global temperature increase. To what degree feedbacks (most importantly water vapor) increase this is a matter of some study, but that CO2 causes warming is exactly what pe

        • Points to GOP: The Earth's temperature is volatile such that man-made changes to it are not really anything new or unique*.

          It's unique in the past several million years.

        • Points against GOP (although this partisan bickering is silly, there's enough stupidity in both parties): The Earth's temperature isn't that volatile, and the man-made changes to it are extremely fast and are pushing global surface temperatures beyond what they've been during the existence of our species.

  • I deny any and all evidence indicating three abrupt pulses of CO2. Even if there was, it wouldn't contribute to global warming. God wouldn't let that happen. He said so. Last night. In a dream.
  • Volcano + Oilfield? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward

    There are several catastrophic event types that, if they occurred at the location of a large carbon reserve, would result in a massive pulse of CO2 released into the atmosphere.

  • CO2 is at what now, 400 PPM?
  • by Robear ( 68955 ) on Thursday October 30, 2014 @08:07PM (#48274891)

    [quote]How do we know the CO2 spikes caused the warming? Perhaps the CO2 resulted from increased biological activity occuring as a result of the warming. [/quote]

    CO2 is a warming gas in the atmosphere; in the absence of any other changes, adding CO2 will warm the atmosphere. However, as the article notes, we don't know what caused the quick ramp-up of CO2, and we *do* know that other factors (both cooling and warming) were in play. We also know that over time the atmosphere warmed enough to end the ice age in question.

    What is safe to say is that CO2 has a warming effect, which could be counterbalanced *and* added to by other factors. It's the overall balance of these things that tilts the scales one way or another. CO2 is just one piece.

    But it's not mistaking correlation for causation to note that adding CO2 to the atmosphere will result in increased warming. That's just basic physics. The fact that it could be offset by something else is immaterial to your point.

    • by linatux ( 63153 )

      After the last spike, where did the CO2 go & why?

      • by itzly ( 3699663 )
        There are several sinks of CO2. The most permanent one is rock weathering. It can also be absorbed by the ocean, or incorporated by growing vegetation. Note that current CO2 levels exceed the mentioned spikes.
  • by argStyopa ( 232550 ) on Thursday October 30, 2014 @08:47PM (#48275075) Journal

    Was it the saber-toothed tigers and their sports cars, or mainly the mammoth families and their fucking SUVs?

  • I read the summary and realized I knew nothing about the economics of electrical production in Denmark. So I looked

    http://shrinkthatfootprint.com... [shrinkthatfootprint.com]

    Denmark pays an avg and whopping 41 cents per kilowatt hour.

    OUCH !!!!!!!

    Say what you will about their plans but at those prices they are not overly concerned about delivering a cost effective product.

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