Flood basalts and Ice Age floods: Repeated late Cenozoic cataclysms of southeastern Washington

Author(s):  
Bruce N. Bjornstad ◽  
R. Scott Babcock ◽  
George V. Last
Keyword(s):  
Ice Age ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 81 (4) ◽  
pp. 315-325 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barry Saltzman ◽  
Kirk A. Maasch

ABSTRACTThe theory of the Quaternary climate will be incomplete unless it is embedded in a more general theory for the fuller Cenozoic that can accommodate the onset of the ice-age fluctuations. Here we construct a simple mathematical model for the late Cenozoic climatic changes based on the hypothesis that forced and free variations of the concentration of atmospheric greenhouse gases (notably CO2) coupled with changes in the global ocean state and ice mass, under the additional influence or earth-orbital forcing, are primary determinants of the climatic state over this long period. Our goal is to illustrate how a single model governing both very long-term variations and higher frequency oscillatory variations in the Pleistocene can be formulated with relatively few adjustable parameters. Although the details of this model are speculative, and other factors neglected here are undoubtedly of importance, it is hoped that the formalism described can provide a basis for developing a comprehensive theory and systematically extending and improving it. According to our model the major near-100 ka period ice-age oscillations of the Pleistocene were caused by the downdraw of atmospheric CO2 (possibly a result of weathering of rapidly uplifted topography) to low enough levels for the ‘slow climatic system’, including glacial ice and the deep ocean state, to become unstable.


Geology ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 22 (6) ◽  
pp. 527 ◽  
Author(s):  
John C. Behrendt ◽  
Donald D. Blankenship ◽  
Carol A. Finn ◽  
Robin E. Bell ◽  
Ronald E. Sweeney ◽  
...  

1996 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. M. West

The Cenozoic of Nepal was a time of great activity, in terms of both the establishment and uplift of the Himalaya and the development of a vertebrate fauna which changed through time in response to the environmental events caused by the elevation of the mountains. Field work conducted over the past twenty years has generated a body of data which brings together palaeontological, ecological, and tectonic interpretations of the Cenozoic history of Nepal Himalaya. Palaeontological data from Nepal are geographically limited. At this time, the early Cenozoic is represented by modest marine and terrestrial mammal remains found near Tansen. The middle and late Cenozoic is also documented from abundant materials found in the Siwaliks in a broad band of Sub-Himalayan sedimentary rocks between Butwal and Nepalganj and north of Jaleswar. Ice Age in Nepal may be interpreted from several Pleistocene localities in the Kathmandu Valley. Nepal's Cenozoic palaeoenvironments are interpreted in large from the fossils found in the areas mentioned above, by analogy to India and Pakistan, and by study of the sedimentology of the enclosing rocks. It is possible to document the arrival of the Indian tectonic plate in South Asia in the early Cenozoic using palaeontologic, sedimentologic and tectonic data. At this time the broad open seaway (the remnant of Tethys) which occupied much of Nepal until the early Cenozoic closed and terrestrial communication with other areas became possible. By the middle Cenozoic, Nepal was the site of major erosional deposition from the rising Himalaya. This palaeoenvironment is indicated by both the terrestrial elastic sedimentary rocks which dominate the Nepal middle and late Cenozoic sequences as well as by the particular vertebrate taxa which have been recovered from the Siwaliks in western Nepal. Nepal's Pleistocene was a time of cool and dry environments; Kathmandu Valley deposits have yielded vertebrate remains which are indicative of this environment. Of particular interest are efforts to relate Himalayan Cenozoic tectonics to the palaeobiological record of Nepalese environments. There are strong indications that the primary elevation of the Himalaya was a mid to late Cenozoic event; this correlates well with the environmental evidence from the fossil assemblages. This paper is devoted to review of palaeontologic, sedimentologic and tectonic data which are used to interpret the Cenozoic history of Nepal Himalaya.


1998 ◽  
Vol 35 (5) ◽  
pp. 504-509 ◽  
Author(s):  
René W Barendregt ◽  
Edward Irving

Magnetostratigraphy indicates that Early Pleistocene glaciations in North America, instead of forming one continuous ice mass from Atlantic to Pacific as they did in the Late Pleistocene, were characterized by eastern and western ice masses separated by a 2000 km wide north-south ice-free corridor down the centre of the continent. We argue, therefore, that the area covered by ice during periods of glaciation, and hence probably ice volume, in North America was considerably less in the first 2 Ma of the late Cenozoic than it was in the last 0.7 Ma. This is consistent with delta 18O records of ocean cores indicating the ice volumes were much less in the earlier than in the later part of the Cenozoic Ice Age.


1987 ◽  
Vol 33 (S1) ◽  
pp. 25-32 ◽  
Author(s):  
G.S. Boulton

AbstractThe principal objectives of glacial geology over the last 50 years have been to establish and explain the history of ice, and in particular glaciation, on Earth and to understand the origin of the erosional and depositional products of ice. One of its major successes has been to establish the tempo and magnitude of change in the global glacier mass during the late Cenozoic ice age, and to demonstrate Earth orbital forcing of these changes. On the larger time-scale of the whole geological record, there has been steady elucidation of the frequency of ice ages since the first evidence of glaciation in rocks 2700 Ma old.There has also been considerable progress in identifying the processes of glacial erosion and deposition and systematizing their products. It is now important that glacial geologists and glaciologists attempt to establish ways in which glacier behaviour is related to sedimentary processes, and via the geological product of those processes to relate the dynamics of glaciers in the past to processes in the lithosphere, hydrosphere, and atmosphere.


Nature ◽  
2005 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Peplow
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
W.P. De Lange

The Greenhouse Effect acts to slow the escape of infrared radiation to space, and hence warms the atmosphere. The oceans derive almost all of their thermal energy from the sun, and none from infrared radiation in the atmosphere. The thermal energy stored by the oceans is transported globally and released after a range of different time periods. The release of thermal energy from the oceans modifies the behaviour of atmospheric circulation, and hence varies climate. Based on ocean behaviour, New Zealand can expect weather patterns similar to those from 1890-1922 and another Little Ice Age may develop this century.


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