Abstract

The Earth has gone through multiple ice ages in the past million years. Understanding the ice age dynamics is crucial to paleoclimatic study, and is helpful for addressing future climate challenges. Though ice ages are paced by variations in Earth’s orbit geometry, how various climatic system components on the Earth respond to insolation forcing and interact with each other remains unclear. A prevailing view argues that the initial responses occur in the northern high latitudes (i.e. the northern high-latitude hypothesis, NHH). This opinion is challenged by recent reports, such as the lead of climate change in the Southern Hemisphere (SH) relative to that in the Northern Hemisphere (NH), the southern control on Atlantic meridional overturning circulations (AMOC), and the potential significance of Southern Hemisphere (SH). Alternatively, the tropical hypothesis (TH) argues for a leading role of the tropics. Both the NHH and the TH belong to a single-forcing mechanism, and have difficulty in interpreting phenomena, such as the saw-tooth pattern of the ice ages. Here we present a new proposal concerning the Earth’s ice age dynamics: the bimodal forcing hypothesis (BFH). The essential assumption of this hypothesis is that for glacial-interglacial cycles, the cooling (glaciation) starts from the northern high latitudes, whereas the warming (deglaciations) starts from the SH. Particularly, the BFH emphasizes the significance of SH oceans in accumulating and transferring heat for deglaciations. Thus, it is capable to reasonably explain the saw-tooth pattern. We compiled 100 paleotemperature records globally for validation. The BFH is consistent with most of these records, and provides a straightforward and comprehensible way to interpret ice age on Earth.

Highlights

  • How the Earth’s climate would respond to increasing anthropogenic atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration concerns the human society (IPCC and Stocker, 2013; Steffen et al, 2018)

  • How do symmetric insolation fluctuations result in asymmetric ice age cycles? Internal feedbacks in Earth’s climate system are

  • The bimodal forcing hypothesis (BFH) we proposed here assumes cooling/glaciation starts from the northern highlatitudes while warming/deglaciation from the Southern Hemisphere (SH)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

How the Earth’s climate would respond to increasing anthropogenic atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration concerns the human society (IPCC and Stocker, 2013; Steffen et al, 2018). An early oceanic response to insolation to the south of Greenland indicated that SST started to decrease at ∼119 kyr ago and a strong ice-rafted-deposit (IRD) input occurred at ∼117 kyr ago, signaling the first regrowth of the Greenland Ice Sheet during the end of last interglacial period (Irvalı et al, 2016) This initial cooling in the northern high latitudes was propagated through oceanic and atmospheric circulations towards the rest of the world. It assumes that different climatic components drive glaciation and deglaciation, contrasting with single-forcing hypotheses which argue for a dominant role of a single climatic component during both ice-age onset and termination This might benefit the understanding for the saw-tooth pattern, which indicates different processes of cooling and warming. To which extent SH local insolation contributes to deglaciation is unsettled

MATERIALS AND METHODS
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