Why our planet began to move in and out of ice ages every 100,000 years? read more at here www.spinonews.com/index.php/item/1420-why-our-planet-began-to-move-in-and-out-of-ice-ages-every-100-000-years

Experts from Cardiff University has offered up an explanation as to why our planet began to move in and out of ice ages every 100,000 years.

This mysterious phenomenon, dubbed the '100,000-year problem' has been occurring for the past million years or so and leads to vast ice sheets covering North America, Europe and Asia. Up until now, scientists have been unable to explain why this happens.

However, there was a point, about a million years ago, called the 'Mid-Pleistocene Transition', in which the ice age intervals changed from every 40,000 years to every 100,000 years.

By studying the chemical make-up of tiny fossils on the ocean floor, the team discovered that there was more CO2 stored in the deep ocean during the ice age periods at regular intervals every 100,000 years.

This suggests that extra carbon dioxide was being pulled from the atmosphere and into the oceans now, subsequently lowering the temperature on Earth and enabling vast ice sheets to engulf the Northern Hemisphere.

Researchers think that the oceans as inhaling and exhaling carbon dioxide, so when the ice sheets are larger, the oceans have inhaled carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, making the planet colder. When the ice sheets are small, the oceans have exhaled carbon dioxide, so there is more in the atmosphere which makes the planet warmer.

By looking at the fossils of tiny creatures on the ocean floor, we showed that when ice sheets were advancing and retreating every 100,000 years the oceans were inhaling more carbon dioxide in the cold periods, suggesting that there was less left in the atmosphere.

Marine algae play a key role in removing CO2 from the atmosphere as it is an essential ingredient of photosynthesis.

Professor Carrie Lear, from the School of Earth and Ocean Sciences, said, if we think of the oceans inhaling and exhaling carbon dioxide, the presence of vast amounts of ice is like a giant gobstopper. It's like a lid on the surface of the ocean.

 

The Earth's climate is currently in a warm spell between glacial periods. The last ice age ended about 11,000 years ago. Since then, temperatures and sea levels have risen, and ice caps have retreated to the poles. In addition to these natural cycles, man-made carbon emissions are also having an effect of warming the climate. 

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