The Origin of Recent Climate: Drifting into the ice ages

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiUndervisning

Standard

The Origin of Recent Climate : Drifting into the ice ages. / Houmark-Nielsen, Michael.

The Origins of All Things. red. / David A.T. Harper; Ole Seberg. 1. udg. København : Munksgaard , 2023. s. 357-371.

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiUndervisning

Harvard

Houmark-Nielsen, M 2023, The Origin of Recent Climate: Drifting into the ice ages. i DAT Harper & O Seberg (red), The Origins of All Things. 1 udg, Munksgaard , København, s. 357-371.

APA

Houmark-Nielsen, M. (2023). The Origin of Recent Climate: Drifting into the ice ages. I D. A. T. Harper, & O. Seberg (red.), The Origins of All Things (1 udg., s. 357-371). Munksgaard .

Vancouver

Houmark-Nielsen M. The Origin of Recent Climate: Drifting into the ice ages. I Harper DAT, Seberg O, red., The Origins of All Things. 1 udg. København: Munksgaard . 2023. s. 357-371

Author

Houmark-Nielsen, Michael. / The Origin of Recent Climate : Drifting into the ice ages. The Origins of All Things. red. / David A.T. Harper ; Ole Seberg. 1. udg. København : Munksgaard , 2023. s. 357-371

Bibtex

@inbook{9d9e2b6b8a2043a58d87577b923e1418,
title = "The Origin of Recent Climate: Drifting into the ice ages",
abstract = "Over the past 50 million years (myr), major geological events include the formation of the Alpine mountain belt by plate collision, the oslation of the antarctic continent and the opening of the North Atlantic Ocean by sea floor spreading.Late Paleogene (40-42 Ma) plate tectonic reorganisation of lithosphere plates and reduced spreading rates were accompanied by the removal of substantial amounts of greenhouse gases from the Earth's atmosphere and the onset of modern oceanic circulation, which led to the development of persistent Antarctic ice sheets.Neogene (25-ca.3 Ma) uplift along the North Atlantic continental margins and enhanced cooling eventually caused Northern Hemisphere ice sheets to grow.Over the last ca. 1 myr, weak but regular changes of solar irradiation received by Earth caused short-term, warm interglacial episodes to alternate with long-term, cold glacial periods at intervals of 100 thousand years(kyr) added 41 kyr and c. 23 kyr rhythms of alternating cool and mild climate.The last ice age (ca. 115-11.7ka) experienced high-frequency millenial-scale climate changes of c. 2-10 kyr long epsodes of slow temperature decline towards cooling followed by rapid warming. In the North Atlantic region, the migration of the Polar Front and the strength of the thermohaline ocean circulation probably caused these rapid climatic oscillations. Climate change occured in close tandenm with the growth and decay of Northern Hemisphere ice sheets, and both together which had a decisive impact on the migration of terrestrial biota.",
author = "Michael Houmark-Nielsen",
year = "2023",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-87-62-81993-1",
pages = "357--371",
editor = "Harper, {David A.T.} and Ole Seberg",
booktitle = "The Origins of All Things",
publisher = "Munksgaard ",
address = "Denmark",
edition = "1",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - The Origin of Recent Climate

T2 - Drifting into the ice ages

AU - Houmark-Nielsen, Michael

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Over the past 50 million years (myr), major geological events include the formation of the Alpine mountain belt by plate collision, the oslation of the antarctic continent and the opening of the North Atlantic Ocean by sea floor spreading.Late Paleogene (40-42 Ma) plate tectonic reorganisation of lithosphere plates and reduced spreading rates were accompanied by the removal of substantial amounts of greenhouse gases from the Earth's atmosphere and the onset of modern oceanic circulation, which led to the development of persistent Antarctic ice sheets.Neogene (25-ca.3 Ma) uplift along the North Atlantic continental margins and enhanced cooling eventually caused Northern Hemisphere ice sheets to grow.Over the last ca. 1 myr, weak but regular changes of solar irradiation received by Earth caused short-term, warm interglacial episodes to alternate with long-term, cold glacial periods at intervals of 100 thousand years(kyr) added 41 kyr and c. 23 kyr rhythms of alternating cool and mild climate.The last ice age (ca. 115-11.7ka) experienced high-frequency millenial-scale climate changes of c. 2-10 kyr long epsodes of slow temperature decline towards cooling followed by rapid warming. In the North Atlantic region, the migration of the Polar Front and the strength of the thermohaline ocean circulation probably caused these rapid climatic oscillations. Climate change occured in close tandenm with the growth and decay of Northern Hemisphere ice sheets, and both together which had a decisive impact on the migration of terrestrial biota.

AB - Over the past 50 million years (myr), major geological events include the formation of the Alpine mountain belt by plate collision, the oslation of the antarctic continent and the opening of the North Atlantic Ocean by sea floor spreading.Late Paleogene (40-42 Ma) plate tectonic reorganisation of lithosphere plates and reduced spreading rates were accompanied by the removal of substantial amounts of greenhouse gases from the Earth's atmosphere and the onset of modern oceanic circulation, which led to the development of persistent Antarctic ice sheets.Neogene (25-ca.3 Ma) uplift along the North Atlantic continental margins and enhanced cooling eventually caused Northern Hemisphere ice sheets to grow.Over the last ca. 1 myr, weak but regular changes of solar irradiation received by Earth caused short-term, warm interglacial episodes to alternate with long-term, cold glacial periods at intervals of 100 thousand years(kyr) added 41 kyr and c. 23 kyr rhythms of alternating cool and mild climate.The last ice age (ca. 115-11.7ka) experienced high-frequency millenial-scale climate changes of c. 2-10 kyr long epsodes of slow temperature decline towards cooling followed by rapid warming. In the North Atlantic region, the migration of the Polar Front and the strength of the thermohaline ocean circulation probably caused these rapid climatic oscillations. Climate change occured in close tandenm with the growth and decay of Northern Hemisphere ice sheets, and both together which had a decisive impact on the migration of terrestrial biota.

M3 - Book chapter

SN - 978-87-62-81993-1

SP - 357

EP - 371

BT - The Origins of All Things

A2 - Harper, David A.T.

A2 - Seberg, Ole

PB - Munksgaard

CY - København

ER -

ID: 360617289