PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

New research published in Science points to the significant role of oceans in ancient global cooling

Research led by Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute scientist finds evidence that early antarctic circumpolar current development impacted global climate

2011-05-27
(Press-News.org) Troy, N.Y. – Thirty-eight million years ago, tropical jungles thrived in what are now the cornfields of the American Midwest and furry marsupials wandered temperate forests in what is now the frozen Antarctic. The temperature differences of that era, known as the late Eocene, between the equator and Antarctica were only half of what they are today. A debate has long been raging in the scientific community on what changes in our global climate system led to such a major shift from the more tropical, greenhouse climate of the Eocene to the modern and much cooler climates of today.

New research published in the journal Science, led by Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute scientist Miriam Katz, is providing some of the strongest evidence to date that the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) played a key role in the major shift in the global climate that began approximately 38 million years ago. The research provides the first evidence that early ACC formation played a vital role in the formation of the modern ocean structure.

The paper, titled "Impact of Antarctic Circumpolar Current development on late Paleogene ocean structure," is published in the May 27, 2011, issue of Science.

"What we have found is that the evolution of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current influenced global ocean circulation much earlier than previous studies have shown," said Katz, who is assistant professor of earth and environmental science at Rensselaer. "This finding is particularly significant because it places the impact of initial shallow ACC circulation in the same interval when the climate began its long-term shift to cooler temperatures."

There has been a debate over the past 40 years on what role the Antarctic Circumpolar Current had in the underlying cooling trend on Earth. Previous research has placed the development of the deep ACC (greater than 2,000 meters water depth) in the late Oligocene (approximately 23-25 million years ago). This is well after the global cooling pattern had been established. With this research, Katz and her colleagues used information from ocean sediments to place the global impact of the ACC to approximately 30 million years ago, when it was still just a shallow current.

Oceans and global temperatures are closely linked. Warmer ocean waters result in warmer air temperatures and vice versa. In the more tropical environs of the Eocene, ocean circulation was much weaker and currents were more diffuse. As a result, heat was more evenly distributed around the world. This resulted in fairly mild oceans and temperatures worldwide, according to Katz. Today, ocean temperatures vary considerably and redistribute warm and cold water around the globe in significant ways.

"As the global ocean currents were formed and strengthened, the redistribution of heat likely played a significant role in the overall cooling of the Earth," Katz said.

And no current is more significant than the ACC. Often referred to as the "Mixmaster" of the ocean, the ACC thermally isolates Antarctica by preventing warm surface waters from subtropical gyres to pass through its current. The ACC instead redirects some of that warm surface water back up toward the North Atlantic, creating the Antarctic Intermediate Water. This blocking of heat enabled the formation and preservation of the Antarctic ice sheets, according to Katz. And it is this circumpolar circulation that Katz's research concludes was responsible for the development of our modern four-layer ocean current and heat distribution system.

To come to her conclusions, Katz looked at the uptake of different elemental isotopes in the skeletons of small organisms found in ocean sediments. The organisms, known as benthic foraminifera, are found in extremely long cores of sediments drilled from the bottom of the ocean floor.

During their lifetime, foraminifera incorporate certain elements and elemental isotopes depending on environmental conditions. By analyzing the ratios of different isotopes and elements, the researchers are able to reconstruct the past environmental conditions that surrounded the foraminifera during their life. Specifically, they looked at isotopes of oxygen and carbon, along with ratios of magnesium versus calcium. More detailed information on Katz's isotopic analysis methods can be found at http://green.rpi.edu/archives/fossils/index.html.

Analysis of these isotopes from sediment cores extracted directly off the North American Atlantic coast showed the earliest evidence for the Antarctic Intermediate Waters, which circulates strictly as a direct consequence of the ACC. This finding is the first evidence of the effects of shallow ACC formation. The findings place development of the ACC's global impact much closer to the time that Antarctica separated from South America. It had previously been thought that the currents moving through this new continental gateway could not be strong enough at such shallow depths to affect global ocean circulation.

Katz points out that the larger cooling trend addressed in the paper has been punctuated by many short, but often significant, episodes of global warming. Such ancient episodes of warming are another significant aspect of her research program, and play an important role in understanding the modern warming of the climate occurring on the planet.

"By reconstructing the climates of the past, we can provide a science-based means to explore or predict possible system responses to the current climate change," Katz said.

### Katz is joined in the research by Benjamin Cramer of Theiss Research; J.R. Toggweiler of Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Lab/NOAA; Chengjie Liu of ExxonMobil Exploration Co.; Bridget Wade of University of Leeds; and Gar Esmay, Kenneth Miller, Yair Rosenthal, and James Wright of Rutgers University.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Online Video Game Marathon to Raise Money for Millie Mae and Ataxia UK

2011-05-27
The video game marathon will be broadcast live via SavePatches and feature a team playing console computer games past and present for 24 hours straight. Viewers will also be able to chat during the marathon through the built in chat feature. Through this feature viewers will be able to suggest games and help the gamers out if they get stuck. "We saw the success of similar events in America and thought the concept could be used in the United Kingdom to raise money for Charity", comments Simon Butler lead gamer and event co-ordinator. "We hope an event like ...

Master gene may shed new light on lysosomal and neurodegenerative disorders

2011-05-27
HOUSTON – (May 27, 2011) – Cells, like ordinary households, produce "garbage" – debris and dysfunctional elements – that need disposal. When the mechanism for taking out this garbage fails, rare genetic diseases called lysosomal storage disorders (including Tay-Sachs, Batten and Fabry disease) can disable and even kill the children they affect. In adults, such failure leads to neurodegenerative diseases that occur later in life, such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases. An international partnership between researchers at the Jan and Dan Duncan Neurological Research ...

Disparities in stroke care prevail among US racial/ethnic groups

2011-05-27
Disparities between racial/ethnic minorities and whites cross all aspects of stroke care, according to an American Heart Association/American Stroke Association scientific statement. The statement, published online in Stroke: Journal of the American Heart Association, is a comprehensive analysis of the role of race and ethnicity in stroke care and its impact on the numbers of people who have a stroke, live with its effects or die among minority groups compared to whites. It also addresses how access to care, response to treatment and participation in clinical research ...

Omega-3 may cut risk of artery disease, heart attacks for patients with stents

2011-05-27
Omega-3 fatty acids, combined with two blood-thinning drugs, significantly changed the blood-clotting process and may reduce the risk of heart attacks in patients with stents in their heart arteries, according to research reported in Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis and Vascular Biology: Journal of the American Heart Association. Foods rich in omega-3, such as salmon and other oily fish, have been previously shown in other studies to reduce the risk of heart problems in people with coronary artery disease. In this study, the participants were given the pill form of omega-3 ...

Lucas Fox Officially Accredited by The Catalonia Generalitat as an Official Estate Agent

2011-05-27
Lucas Fox International Properties today announce their accreditation as a registered estate agent in Cataluna. The register d'agents immobiliaris accreditation is given by The Generalitat of Catalonia. The accreditation allows the company to provide estate agency services in Catalonia. Alexander Vaughan, Director of Lucas Fox International Barcelona comments, "This accreditation verifies our high levels of service and commitment to our clients. Lucas Fox has always strived to worth ethically and professionally and this is formalised by our obtaining the Generalitat's ...

Scientist instils new hope of detecting gravitational waves

2011-05-27
Direct evidence of the existence of gravitational waves is something that has long eluded researchers, however new research has suggested that adding just one of the proposed detectors in Japan, Australia and India will drastically increase the expected rate of detection. In a study published today, Friday, 27 May, in IOP Publishing's journal Classical and Quantum Gravity, Professor Bernard Schutz, of the Albert Einstein Institute, Germany, demonstrated that an additional detector would more than double the detection rate of gravitational waves and could double the ...

Scientists find genetic basis for key parasite function in malaria

Scientists find genetic basis for key parasite function in malaria
2011-05-27
Snug inside a human red blood cell, the malaria parasite hides from the immune system and fuels its growth by digesting hemoglobin, the cell's main protein. The parasite, however, must obtain additional nutrients from the bloodstream via tiny pores in the cell membrane. Now, investigators from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health, have found the genes that malaria parasites use to create these feeding pores. The research was led by Sanjay A. Desai, M.D., Ph.D., of NIAID's Laboratory of Malaria and ...

Channelling Positivity Channel Swimming Duo Help Launch BBC Big Splash Campaign

2011-05-27
Justine Drury and Kate Vines, who will swim the Channel as a female relay this summer, have helped to launch the BBC 'The Big Splash' campaign, "inspiring the UK to swim". Channeling Positivity is the name of the ladies' swimming challenge. The two will attempt to swim the Channel this July, and as such, hope to become the first female relay duo from Nottingham to do so. They are raising money for the Teenage Cancer Trust appeal in the East Midlands and their campaign is sponsored by South Nottingham College. The BBC has been working closely with the national ...

Experts create first legal roadmap to tackle local ocean acidification hotspots

2011-05-27
Coastal communities hard hit by ocean acidification hotspots have more options than they may realize, says an interdisciplinary team of science and legal experts. In a paper published in the journal Science, experts from Stanford University's Center for Ocean Solutions and colleagues make the case that communities don't need to wait for a global solution to ocean acidification to fix a local problem that is compromising their marine environment. Many localized acidification hotspots can be traced to local contributors of acidity that can be addressed using existing laws, ...

Sage 200 v2011, Software For A Better Connected Business? DMCC Software Reports

2011-05-27
Many organisations are moving away from disparate departmental systems in favour of business wide software suites and CRM solutions that provide each user with a 360 degree view of organisational data. With up to date information available when and where it is needed, businesses can respond more effectively to the needs of customers. The Sage 200 Suite is modular suite of business software designed to provide a "joined up" approach to business. It is a fully integrated business solution that allows organisations to coordinate each business function from accounts ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Research Spotlight: Researchers reveal the influences behind timing of sleep spindle production

New research reveals groundwater pathways across continent

Students and faculty to join research teams this spring at Department of Energy National Laboratories and a fusion facility

SETI Forward recognizes tomorrow’s cosmic pioneers

Top mental health research achievements of 2024 from the Brain & Behavior Research Foundation

FAU names Lewis S. Nelson, M.D., Dean of the Schmidt College of Medicine

UC Irvine-led study challenges traditional risk factors for brain health in the oldest-old

Study shows head trauma may activate latent viruses, leading to neurodegeneration

Advancements in neural implant research enhance durability

SwRI models Pluto-Charon formation scenario that mimics Earth-Moon system

Researchers identify public policies that work to prevent suicide

Korea University College of Medicine and Yale Univeristy co-host forum on Advancing Healthcare through Data and AI Innovations

Nuclear lipid droplets: Key regulators of aging and nuclear homeostasis

Driving autonomous vehicles to a more efficient future

Severe maternal morbidity among pregnant people with opioid use disorder enrolled in Medicaid

Macronutrients in human milk exposed to antidepressant and anti-inflammatory medications

Exploring the eco-friendly future of antibiotic particles

Can you steam away prostate cancer?

The CTAO becomes a European Research Infrastructure Consortium

Introduction to science journalism guide published in Albanian

Official launch of Global Heat Health Information Network Southeast Asia Hub at NUS Medicine

Childhood smoking increases a person’s risk of developing COPD

MD Anderson and Myriad Genetics form strategic alliance to evaluate clinical utility of Myriad’s molecular residual disease assay

Method can detect harmful salts forming in nuclear waste melters

Researchers reveal how psychological stress may aggravate skin allergies

International partnership aims to provide first-class osteopathy training

Reducing irrigation for livestock feed crops is needed to save Great Salt Lake, study argues

Clean energy tax credit safeguards could save taxpayers $1 trillion

New genetic biocontrol breakthrough offers hope against disease-carrying mosquitoes and agricultural pests

Sex differences in brain structure present at birth

[Press-News.org] New research published in Science points to the significant role of oceans in ancient global cooling
Research led by Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute scientist finds evidence that early antarctic circumpolar current development impacted global climate