(Press-News.org) Not long ago, geologically speaking, a now-vanished lake covered a huge expanse of today's Canadian prairie. As big as Hudson Bay, the lake was fed by melting glaciers as they receded at the end of the last ice age. At its largest, Glacial Lake Agassiz, as it is known, covered most of the Canadian province of Manitoba, plus a good part of western Ontario. A southern arm straddled the Minnesota-North Dakota border.
Not far from the ancient shore of Lake Agassiz, University of Cincinnati Professor of Geology Thomas Lowell will present a paper about the lake to the Geological Society of America annual meeting in Minneapolis. Lowell's paper is one of 14 to be presented Oct. 10 in a session titled: "Glacial Lake Agassiz -- Its History and Influence on North America and on Global Systems: In Honor of James T. Teller."
Although Lake Agassiz is gone, questions about its origin and disappearance remain. Answers to those questions may provide clues to our future climate. One question involves Lake Agassiz' role in a thousand-year cold snap known as the Younger Dryas.
As the last ice age ended, thousands of years of warming temperatures were interrupted by an abrupt shift to cold. Tundra conditions expanded southward, to cover the land exposed as the forests retreated. This colder climate is marked in the fossil record by a flowering plant known as Dryas, which gives the period its name.
"My work focuses on abrupt or rapid climate change," Lowell said. "The Younger Dryas offers an opportunity to study such change. The climate then went from warming to cooling very rapidly, in less than 30 years or so."
Scientists noted that the Younger Dryas cold spell seemed to coincide with lower water levels in Lake Agassiz. Had the lake drained? And, if so, had the fresh water of the lake caused this climate change by disrupting ocean currents? This is the view of many scientists, Lowell said.
Lowell investigated a long-standing mystery involving Lake Agassiz -- a significant drop in water level known as the Moorhead Low. It has long been believed that the Moorehead Low when water drained from Lake Agassiz through a new drainage pathway. Could this drainage have flowed through the St. Lawrence Seaway into the North Atlantic Ocean?
"The most common hypothesis for catastrophic lowering is a change in drainage pathways," Lowell said.
The problem is, better dating of lake levels and associated organic materials do not support a rapid outflow at the right time.
"An alternative explanation is needed," he said.
Lowell's research shows that, although water levels did drop, the surface area of the lake increased more than seven-fold at the same time. His research suggests that the lower water levels were caused by increased evaporation, not outflow. While the melting glacier produced a lot of water, Lowell notes that the Moorhead Low was roughly contemporaneous with the Younger Dryas cold interval, when the atmosphere was drier and there was increased solar radiation.
"The dry air would reduce rainfall and enhance evaporation," Lowell said. "The cold would reduce meltwater production, and shortwave radiation would enhance evaporation when the lake was not frozen and sublimation when the lake was ice-covered."
Further research will attempt a clearer picture of this ancient episode, but researchers will have to incorporate various factors including humidity, yearly duration of lake ice, annual temperature, and a better understanding of how and where meltwater flowed from the receding glaciers.
Lowell's efforts to understand changes in ancient climates have taken him from Alaska to Peru, throughout northern Canada and Greenland.
In Greenland, Lowell and a team of graduate students pulled cores of sediment from lakes that are still ice-covered for most of the year. Buried in those sediments are clues to long-ago climate.
"We look at the mineralogy of the sediments," Lowell said, "and also the chironomids. They're a type of midge and they're very temperature sensitive. The exact species and the abundance of midges in our cores can help pinpoint temperature when these sediments were deposited."
###
Lowell's research was initially funded by the Comer Foundation. In recent years, the National Science Foundation has provided funding for this work.
Long-lost Lake Agassiz offers clues to climate change
2011-10-06
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Atlanta Countertops Co, Craftmark Solid Surfaces Inc, Reports Increased Sales for Quartz Countertops
2011-10-06
Atlanta granite countertops retailer Craftmark Solid Surfaces, Inc., reports that quartz has seen an increase in sales as a countertop surfaces. In recent years, granite has been the most requested surface, its success generally attributed to its natural beauty and durability. However, though Granite may have been the clear leader in Atlanta countertops resurfacing in 2010, quartz is rapidly gaining in popularity.
Craftmark announced that quartz has soared in sales this year, challenging granite for the title of best countertop surface. "Sales for quartz surfaces ...
EARTH: down to earth with Nobel Prize winner Adam Riess
2011-10-06
Alexandria, VA -- The universe is repulsive, but in a good way. In 2008, while studying bursts of light emitted from exploding stars, newly named Nobel Laureates Adam Riess, Saul Perlmutter and Brian P. Schmidt discovered one of the most mysterious, yet prevalent, components of our universe: dark energy. The three were using the brightness and color from supernovae to determine the speed with which the universe expanded in the past, versus how fast it is expanding now. What they discovered completely transformed how astronomers view the evolution of space. The growth of ...
You can wash away your troubles, with soap
2011-10-06
"Wash away my troubles, wash away my pain," goes the song. Is there such a thing as soap and water for the psyche? Yes: Metaphor is that powerful, say Spike W.S. Lee and Norbert Schwarz of the University of Michigan in a literature review appearing in the latest issue of Current Directions in Psychological Science, a journal published by the Association for Psychological Science.
Religious rites like baptism make psychological sense, the article suggests. Says Lee: "Cleansing is about the removal of residues." By washing the hands, taking a shower, or even thinking of ...
Atlanta Tinting Company The Tint Guy Offers Commercial Window Tinting Services
2011-10-06
Atlanta tinting company The Tint Guy has been helping local business cut down on their energy costs this summer by installing protective window film on office windows throughout the city. Specializing in commercial, residential, and automotive window tinting in Atlanta, The Tint Guy provides only the highest quality window tint Atlanta has available.
Commercial tinting is one of the most cost-efficient options for improving an office building, capable of recovering its cost in energy savings within a short period of time. The larger the building, the more potential to ...
Virginia Commonwealth University study: We are what we experience
2011-10-06
Our life experiences -- the ups and downs, and everything in between -- shape us, stay with us and influence our emotional set point as adults, according to a new study led by Virginia Commonwealth University researchers.
The study suggests that, in addition to our genes, our life experiences are important influences on our levels of anxiety and depression.
"In this time of emphasis on genes for this and that trait, it is important to remember that our environmental experiences also make important contributions to who we are as people," said principal investigator ...
New potential therapeutic target for breast cancer
2011-10-06
New Rochelle, NY, October 5, 2011 -- A possible new target for breast cancer therapy comes from the discovery that the Tyk2 protein helps suppress the growth and metastasis of breast tumors, as reported in Journal of Interferon & Cytokine Research, a peer-reviewed journal published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. The article is available free online for the next week at http://www.liebertpub.com/jir.
Qifang Zhang and Andrew Larner, Virginia Commonwealth University (Richmond, VA), and colleagues from VCU, Temple University School of Medicine (Philadelphia, PA), Jagiellonian ...
Atlanta Moving Company Atlanta Peach Movers Advise Extra Care for Moving Specialty Items
2011-10-06
The professionals at Atlanta Peach Movers, a full service Atlanta moving company specializing in local and long distance moves, remind Atlanta residents of the importance of hiring a professional moving service to move fragile or bulky items such as pianos, paintings, or arcade games. These items are valuable and often irreplaceable, and require special care when being moved. The Atlanta long distance movers at Atlanta Peach Movers are highly trained and experienced in moving all types of specialty items.
In addition to Atlanta moving services, Atlanta Peach Movers ...
New study shows inflammatory food toxins found in high levels in infants
2011-10-06
Researchers from Mount Sinai School of Medicine have found high levels of food toxins called Advanced Glycation End products (AGEs) in infants. Excessive food AGEs, through both maternal blood transmission and baby formula, could together significantly increase children's risk for diseases such as diabetes from a very young age. A second study of AGEs in adults found that cutting back on processed, grilled, and fried foods, which are high in AGEs, may improve insulin resistance in people with diabetes. AGEs -- toxic glucose byproducts previously tied to high blood sugar ...
Can peer mentors help teens lose weight? new strategies for combatting teen obesity
2011-10-06
New Rochelle, NY, October 5, 2011 -- Obesity among adolescents has more than tripled over the past 40 years, and recent estimates find that over 18% of teens in the U.S. are obese. Education and mentoring targeting obesity and delivered in high schools by peers has been shown to have a significant impact on teen diet and physical activity, according to a study published in Childhood Obesity, a peer-reviewed journal published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.(http://www.liebertpub.com) The article "Effect of HealthCorps, a High School Peer Mentoring Program, on Youth Diet and Physical ...
I&K International Limited Offer Customers the Chance to Get a Free Makeup Bag
2011-10-06
I&K International Limited has announced an exciting new offer, whereby clients at Hairtrade.com will receive a free makeup bag when they buy any 3 items at the online store.
Customers shopping at Hairtrade.com - the UKs leading online hair care and hair extensions supplier - will be able to take advantage of the offer up until the 15th of October 2011.
Hairtrade.com has found a great deal of success since it started to supply all kinds of hair extension products back in 2005, and is now considered a must-visit for shoppers interested in hair extensions and wigs. ...