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1.64 Ma

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Title: 1.64 Ma


1
The Quaternary Period
  • 1.64 Ma
  • Only 38 seconds long!

2
Cenozoic Time Scale
3
PleistoceneHolocene Tectonism and Volcanism
  • Best known for glaciation
  • but also a time of volcanism and tectonic
    activity
  • Continuing orogeny
  • Himalayas
  • Andes Mountains
  • Deformation at convergent plate boundaries
  • Aleutian Islands
  • Japan
  • Philippines

4
Uplift and Deformation
  • Interactions between
  • North American and Pacific plates
  • along the San Andreas transform plate boundary
  • produced folding, faulting, and a number of
    basins and uplifts
  • Marine terraces
  • covered with Pleistocene sediments
  • attest to periodic uplift in southern California

5
Marine Terraces
  • marine terraces on San Clemente Island,
    California
  • each terrace represents a period when that area
    was at sea level
  • highest terrace is now about 400 m above sea level

6
N Ca marine terraces
7
Cascade Range
  • Ongoing subduction of remnants of the Farallon
    plate
  • beneath Central America and the Pacific Northwest
  • account for volcanism in these two areas
  • The Cascade Range
  • of California, Oregon, Washington, and British
    Columbia
  • has a history dating back to the Oligocene
  • but the large volcanoes now present formed during
    the last 1.6 million years

8
Lassen PeakLava Dome
  • Lassen Peak, a large lava dome,
  • formed on the flank of an older, eroded composite
    volcano in California about 27,000 years ago
  • It erupted most recently from 1914 to 1917

9
Pleistocene Stratigraphy
  • Began 1.6 Ma
  • Ended 10,000 years ago
  • Pleistocene-Holocene (Recent) boundary
  • Based on
  • climate change to warmer conditions concurrent
    with melting of most recent ice sheets
  • oxygen isotope ratios determined from shells of
    marine organisms
  • changes in vegetation

10
Glaciers in North America
11
Glaciers in Europe
12
Four Glacial Stages
  • Detailed mapping reveals several glacial advances
    and retreats
  • North America had at least four major episodes of
    Pleistocene glaciation
  • Each advance was followed by warmer climates
  • The four glacial stages
  • Wisconsin
  • Illinoian
  • Kansan
  • Nebraskan
  • named for the states of the southernmost advance

13
Four Glacial Stages
14
How Many Stages?
  • Recent detailed studies of glacial deposits
    indicate
  • there were an as yet undetermined number of
    pre-Illinoian glacial events
  • history of glacial advances and retreats in North
    America is more complex than previously thought

15
Correlation
  • six or seven major glacial advances and retreats
    are recognized in Europe
  • at least 20 major warmcold cycles can be
    detected in deep-sea cores
  • Why isn't there better correlation among the
    different areas if glaciation was such a
    widespread event?
  • chaotic sediments difficult to correlate
  • minor fluctuations

16
Evidence for Climatic Fluctuations
  • Changes in surface ocean temperature
  • recorded in the O18/O16 ratio in the shells of
    planktonic foraminifera
  • provide data about climatic events

17
Oxygen Isotope Ratio
18
Onset of the Ice Age
Cenozoic Glaciations
19
Why the Icehouse?
  • Long-term climate drivers
  • Plate tectonics
  • Opening/closing of seaways
  • Ocean currents are our heat and AC
  • Uplift and erosion of mountains
  • Weathering reduces atmospheric CO2
  • Life catastrophic evolution of new capabilities
  • O2
  • Astronomical drivers
  • Other bodies (moon, sun) pull on the Earth,
    changing its distance to the sun

20
Why the Pleistocene Icehouse ?
  • Long-term tectonic driver
  • Redirection of ocean currents
  • Isolation of Antarctica
  • Collision of N and S America
  • New mountains more weathering
  • Mineral weathering reduces atmospheric CO2
  • less CO2 less greenhouse effect

21
Antarctica became isolated ocean circulation
changes, cools
22
Why the Icehouse?
  • Shut off E/W global ocean flow
  • Isthmus of Panama North South American plates
    collided 3.5 Ma

23
Glaciers need precipitation
  • Caribbean warms
  • Gulf Stream moves warm water north
  • Increases ocean evaporation and precipitation on
    land

24
Pleistocene Underway
  • By Middle Miocene time
  • an Antarctic ice sheet had formed
  • accelerating the formation of very cold oceanic
    waters
  • About 1.6 million years ago
  • continental glaciers began forming in the
    Northern Hemisphere
  • The Pleistocene Ice Age was underway

25
But we didnt just get ONE ice age
You Are Here!
26
We got dozens of them.
27
The Milankovitch Theory
  • Put forth by the Serbian astronomer
  • Milutin Milankovitch while interned by
    Austro-Hungarians during WWI
  • Minor irregularities in Earth's rotation and
    orbit
  • are sufficient to alter the amount of solar
    radiation that Earth receives at 65 N
  • and hence can change climate
  • (criticism at the time why 65 N?!?)

28
Three Variables
Ellipticity
  • about 100,000 years

29
Axis Tilt
  • The angle between
  • Earth's axis
  • and a line perpendicular to the plane of its
    orbit around the Sun
  • This angle shifts about 1.5
  • from its current value of 23.5
  • during a 41,000-year cycle

30
Precession
  • Earth moves around the Sun
  • spinning on its axis
  • which is tilted at 23.5 to the plane of its
    orbit
  • Earths axis of rotation
  • slowly moves
  • and traces out the path of a cone in space

Plane of Earths Orbit
31
Effects of Precession
  • At present, Earth is closer to the Sun in January
  • In about 11,000 years, closer to the Sun in July

32
Makes a tippy system
33
Convolve 100,000 41,000 26,000 years
34
Pleistocene Glacial cycles
35
Warming Trend
  • 10,000-6,000 years ago, a warming trend
  • pollen
  • tree rings
  • ice advance/retreat
  • Then the climate became cooler and moister
  • favoring the growth of valley glaciers on the
    Northern Hemisphere continents
  • Three episodes of glacial expansion took place
    during this neoglaciation

36
Little Ice Age
  • The most recent glacial expansion
  • between 1500 and the mid- to late 1800s
  • was a time of generally cooler temperatures
  • It had a profound effect on
  • the social and economic fabric of human society
  • accounting for several famines
  • migrations of many Europeans to the New World
  • Local phenomenon

Pieter Bruegel the Elder (15251569)
37
GlaciersWhat Are They and How Do They Form?
  • Geologists define a glacier
  • as a mass of ice on land that moves by plastic
    flow
  • internal deformation in response to pressure
  • and by basal slip
  • sliding over its underlying surface

38
How do glaciers form?
  • Any area receiving more snow in cold seasons
  • than melts in warm seasons
  • has a net accumulation over the years
  • As accumulation takes place
  • snow at depth is converted to ice
  • when it reaches a critical thickness of about 40
    m
  • it begins to flow in response to pressure

Marguerite Bay, 2002
39
Glaciers Move
  • Once a glacier forms
  • it moves from a zone of accumulation
  • toward its zone of wastage
  • As long as a balance exists between the zones,
  • the glacier has a balanced budget

Amundsen Sea, 1999
40
Glaciation and Its Effects
  • Climate itself
  • Sea level change
  • Sediments
  • Landforms and topography
  • Isostatic rebound

41
Isostatic Rebound in Eastern Canada
  • Uplift in meters
  • during the last 6000 years

42
U-Shaped Glacial Trough
  • This U-shaped glacial trough
  • in Montana
  • was eroded by a valley glacier

43
Proglacial Lakes
  • Form where meltwater accumulates along a
    glacier's margin
  • Deposits in proglacial lakes
  • vary considerably from gravel to mud
  • of special interest are the finely laminated mud
    deposits
  • consisting of alternating dark and light layers
  • Each darklight couplet is a varve
  • representing an annual deposit

44
Characteristics of Varves
  • Light-colored layer of silt and clay
  • formed during the summer
  • The dark layer made up of smaller particles and
    organic matter
  • formed during the winter when the lake froze over

Varves with a dropstone
45
Moraines
  • Most important glacial deposits
  • chaotic mixtures of poorly sorted sediment
    deposited directly by glacial ice
  • An end moraine is deposited
  • when a glaciers terminus remains stationary for
    some time

Mt. Cook, 1999
46
Recessional Moraine
  • If the glaciers terminus
  • should recede and then stabilize once again
  • another end moraine forms
  • known as a recessional moraine

47
Glacial Features
  • Features seen in areas once covered by glaciers
  • glacial polish
  • the sheen
  • striations
  • scratches?

Devils Postpile National Monument, California
48
Glacial Sediment
  • Glaciers typically deposit poorly sorted
    nonstratified sediment

49
Cape Cod Lobe
  • Position of the Cape Cod Lobe of glacial ice
  • 23,000 to 16,000 years ago
  • when it deposited the terminal moraine
  • that would become Cape Cod and nearby islands

50
Recessional Moraine
  • Deposition of a recessional moraine
  • following a retreat of the ice front

51
Cape Cod
  • By about 6000 years ago
  • the sea covered the lowlands
  • between the moraines
  • and beaches and other shoreline features formed

52
Changes in Sea Level
  • Today, between 28 and 35 million km3 of water
  • frozen in glaciers
  • During the maximum extent of Pleistocene glaciers
  • more than 70 million km3 of ice
  • These huge masses of ice contained enough frozen
    water
  • to lower sea level by 130 m

53
Land Bridge
  • Large areas of today's continental shelves were
    exposed
  • The Bering Strait exposed
  • Alaska connected with Siberia via a broad land
    bridge
  • Native Americans and various mammals, such as the
    bison, migrated

54
What would happen if all glaciers melted?
  • Sea level would rise about 70 m
  • many of the world's large population centers
    would be flooded

55
Where is all that ice?
66 m is in Antarctica
56
Isn't it stable?
We can watch it breaking up
57
Change is ongoing
Anderson et al., 2002
58
Difficult to Predict
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