Mid-Pleistocene Transition

Five million years of glacial cycles are shown, based on oxygen isotope ratio believed to be a good proxy of global ice volume. The MPT is the transition between the periodicities shown in green.

The Mid-Pleistocene Transition (MPT), also known as the Mid-Pleistocene Revolution (MPR),[1] is a fundamental change in the behaviour of glacial cycles during the Quaternary glaciations.[2] The transition occurred gradually,[3] taking place approximately 1.25–0.7 million years ago, in the Pleistocene epoch.[4] Before the MPT, the glacial cycles were dominated by a 41,000-year periodicity with low-amplitude, thin ice sheets, and a linear relationship to the Milankovitch forcing from axial tilt.[2] Because of this, sheets were more dynamic during the Early Pleistocene.[5] After the MPT there have been strongly asymmetric cycles with long-duration cooling of the climate and build-up of thick ice sheets, followed by a fast change from extreme glacial conditions to a warm interglacial.[2] This led to less dynamic ice sheets.[5] Interglacials before the MPT had lower levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide compared to interglacials after the MPT.[6] One of the MPT's effects was causing ice sheets to become higher in altitude and less slippery compared to before.[7] The cycle lengths have varied, with an average length of approximately 100,000 years.[2][4]

The Mid-Pleistocene Transition was long a problem to explain, as described in the article 100,000-year problem. The MPT can now be reproduced by numerical models that assume a decreasing level of atmospheric carbon dioxide, a high sensitivity to this decrease, and gradual removal of regoliths from northern hemisphere areas subject to glacial processes during the Quaternary.[2] The reduction in CO2 may be related to changes in volcanic outgassing, the burial of ocean sediments, carbonate weathering or iron fertilization of oceans from glacially induced dust.[8]

Regoliths are believed to affect glaciation because ice with its base on regolith at the pressure melting point will slide with relative ease, which limits the thickness of the ice sheet. Before the Quaternary, northern North America and northern Eurasia are believed to have been covered by thick layers of regoliths, which have been worn away over large areas by subsequent glaciations. Later glaciations were increasingly based on core areas, with thick ice sheets strongly coupled to bare bedrock.[4]

It has also been proposed that an enlarged deep ocean carbon inventory in the Atlantic Ocean played a role in the increase in amplitude of glacial-interglacial cycles because this increase in carbon storage capacity is coincident with the transition from 41-kyr to 100-kyr glacial-interglacial cycles.[9]

However, a 2020 study concluded that ice age terminations might have been influenced by obliquity since the Mid-Pleistocene Transition, which caused stronger summers in the Northern Hemisphere.[10] Evidence suggests that fluctuations in the volume of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet continued to be governed dominantly by fluctuations in obliquity until about 400,000 years ago.[11]

In Australia the MPT resulted in the formation of the dunes of Fraser Island and the Cooloola Sand Mass. The increasing amplitude of sea level variations led to increased redistribution of sediments stored on the seafloor across the continental shelf. The development of Fraser Island indirectly led to the formation of the Great Barrier Reef by drastically decreasing the flow of sediment to the area of continental shelf north of Fraser Island, a necessary precondition for the growth of coral reefs on such an enormous scale as found in the Great Barrier Reef.[12]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Maslin, Mark A.; Ridgwell, Andy J. (2005). "Mid-Pleistocene revolution and the 'eccentricity myth'". Geological Society, London, Special Publications. 247 (1): 19–34. Bibcode:2005GSLSP.247...19M. doi:10.1144/GSL.SP.2005.247.01.02. S2CID 73611295. Retrieved 19 April 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d e Brovkin, V.; Calov, R.; Ganopolski, A.; Willeit, M. (April 2019). "Mid-Pleistocene transition in glacial cycles explained by declining CO2 and regolith removal | Science Advances". Science Advances. 5 (4): eaav7337. doi:10.1126/sciadv.aav7337. PMC 6447376. PMID 30949580.
  3. ^ Legrain, Etienne; Parrenin, Frédéric; Capron, Emilie (23 March 2023). "A gradual change is more likely to have caused the Mid-Pleistocene Transition than an abrupt event". Communications Earth & Environment. 4 (1): 90. Bibcode:2023ComEE...4...90L. doi:10.1038/s43247-023-00754-0.
  4. ^ a b c Clark, Peter U; Archer, David; Pollard, David; Blum, Joel D; Rial, Jose A; Brovkin, Victor; Mix, Alan C; Pisias, Nicklas G; Roy, Martin (2006). "The middle Pleistocene transition: characteristics, mechanisms, and implications for long-term changes in atmospheric pCO2" (PDF). Quaternary Science Reviews. 25 (23–24). Elsevier: 3150–3184. Bibcode:2006QSRv...25.3150C. doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2006.07.008. Archived from the original (PDF) on 31 August 2017. Retrieved 5 April 2019.
  5. ^ a b Yan, Yuzhen; Kurbatov, Andrei V.; Mayewski, Paul A.; Shackleton, Sarah; Higgins, John A. (8 December 2022). "Early Pleistocene East Antarctic temperature in phase with local insolation". Nature Geoscience. 16 (1): 50–55. doi:10.1038/s41561-022-01095-x. S2CID 254484999. Retrieved 19 April 2023.
  6. ^ Yamamoto, Masanobu; Clemens, Steven C.; Seki, Osamu; Tsuchiya, Yuko; Huang, Yongsong; O'ishi, Ryouta; Abe-Ouchi, Ayako (31 March 2022). "Increased interglacial atmospheric CO2 levels followed the mid-Pleistocene Transition". Nature Geoscience. 15 (4): 307–313. doi:10.1038/s41561-022-00918-1. hdl:2115/86913. S2CID 247844873. Retrieved 20 January 2023.
  7. ^ Bailey, Ian; Bolton, Clara T.; DeConto, Robert M.; Pollard, David; Schiebel, Ralf; Wilson, Paul A. (26 March 2010). "A low threshold for North Atlantic ice rafting from "low-slung slippery" late Pliocene ice sheets". Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology. 25 (1): 1–14. Bibcode:2010PalOc..25.1212B. doi:10.1029/2009PA001736.
  8. ^ "Chalk et al. (2017): Causes of ice age intensification across the Mid-Pleistocene Transition, PNAS December 12, 2017 114 (50) 13114-13119".
  9. ^ Farmer, J. R.; Hönisch, B.; Haynes, L. L.; Kroon, D.; Jung, S.; Ford, H. L.; Raymo, M. E.; Jaume-Seguí, M.; Bell, D. B.; Goldstein, S. L.; Pena, L. D.; Yehudai, M.; Kim, J. (8 April 2019). "Deep Atlantic Ocean carbon storage and the rise of 100,000-year glacial cycles". Nature Geoscience. 12 (5): 355–360. Bibcode:2019NatGe..12..355F. doi:10.1038/s41561-019-0334-6. hdl:20.500.11820/a56ecd3b-7adc-4d37-8ca2-8e17440b1ff5. ISSN 1752-0908. S2CID 133953916. Retrieved 20 December 2023.
  10. ^ Petra Bajo; et al. (2020). "Persistent influence of obliquity on ice age terminations since the Middle Pleistocene transition". Science. Vol. 367, no. 6483. pp. 1235–1239. doi:10.1126/science.aaw1114.
  11. ^ Ohneiser, Christian; Hulbe, Christina L.; Beltran, Catherine; Riesselman, Christina R.; Moy, Christopher M.; Condon, Donna B.; Worthington, Rachel A. (5 December 2022). "West Antarctic ice volume variability paced by obliquity until 400,000 years ago". Nature Geoscience. 16: 44–49. doi:10.1038/s41561-022-01088-w. S2CID 254326281. Retrieved 19 April 2023.
  12. ^ Ellerton, D.; Rittenour, T. M.; Shulmeister, J.; Roberts, A. P.; Miot da Silva, G.; Gontz, A.; Hesp, P. A.; Moss, T.; Patton, N.; Santini, T.; Welsh, K.; Zhao, X. (14 November 2022). "Fraser Island (K'gari) and initiation of the Great Barrier Reef linked by Middle Pleistocene sea-level change". Nature Geoscience. 15 (12): 1017–1026. Bibcode:2022NatGe..15.1017E. doi:10.1038/s41561-022-01062-6. S2CID 253538370.