Abstract

The coupled 100,000 year variations in ice volume, temperature, and atmospheric CO2 during the late Pleistocene are generally considered to arise from a combination of orbital forcing, ice dynamics, and ocean circulation. Also previously argued is that changes in glaciation influence atmospheric CO2 concentrations through modifying subaerial volcanic eruptions and CO2 emissions. Building on recent evidence that ocean ridge volcanism responds to changes in sea level, here it is suggested that ocean ridges may play an important role in generating late-Pleistocene 100 ky glacial cycles. If all volcanic CO2 emissions responded immediately to changes in pressure, subaerial and ocean-ridge volcanic emissions anomalies would oppose one another. At ocean ridges, however, the egress of CO2 from the mantle is likely to be delayed by tens-of-thousands of years, or longer, owing to ascent time. A simple model involving temperature, ice, and CO2 is presented that oscillates at ∼100 ky time scales when incorporating a delayed CO2 contribution from ocean ridge volcanism, even if the feedback accounts for only a small fraction of total changes in CO2. Oscillations readily become phase-locked with insolation forcing associated with changes in Earth's orbit. Under certain parameterizations, a transition from ∼40 ky to larger ∼100 ky oscillations occurs during the middle Pleistocene in response to modulations in orbital forcing. This novel description of Pleistocene glaciation should be testable through ongoing advances in understanding the circulation of carbon through the solid earth.

Highlights

  • A satisfactory explanation of late-Pleistocene glacial cycles requires explanation of the accompanying changes in atmospheric CO2 (Broecker, 2013)

  • To account for the approximately 80 ppm rise in atmospheric CO2 during latePleistocene deglaciations, most hypotheses call on the Southern Ocean to release CO2 back to the atmosphere

  • Assuming that changes in CO2 emissions are proportional to global eruption rates, HL09 estimated that increased subaerial volcanism contributes between 15–70 ppm of the rise in atmospheric CO2 concentrations during the second half of the deglaciation

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Summary

Introduction

A satisfactory explanation of late-Pleistocene glacial cycles requires explanation of the accompanying changes in atmospheric CO2 (Broecker, 2013). Assuming that changes in CO2 emissions are proportional to global eruption rates, HL09 estimated that increased subaerial volcanism contributes between 15–70 ppm of the rise in atmospheric CO2 concentrations during the second half of the deglaciation. Such volcanic emissions may help explain the noted stability of certain carbon cycle indicators between glacial and interglacial conditions through reducing the total amount of carbon that otherwise must be extracted from the glacial ocean (Broecker et al, 2015). We make the case that coupling amongst glaciation, volcanism, and emissions of CO2 are an important feedback upon changes in glaciation, as we argued previously in HL09, but that this coupling could give rise to the 100 ky time scale characteristic of late-Pleistocene glacial cycles

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State dependence
Full obliquity forcing
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Parameter sensitivity
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