The Free Press Journal

Current climate change may be unparallel­ed in 100mn yrs: Study

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The current period of climate change may be unparallel­led over the last 100 million years, warn scientists who discovered a flaw in the way past ocean temperatur­es have been estimated up to now.

According to the methodolog­y widely used by the scientific community, the temperatur­e of the ocean depths and that of the surface of the polar ocean 100 million years ago were around 15 degrees higher than current readings.

However, researcher­s, including those from the French National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS), have found that ocean temperatur­es may in fact have remained relatively stable throughout this period, raising serious concerns about current levels of climate change.

"If we are right, our study challenges decades of paleoclima­te research," said Anders Meibom, from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL).

For over 50 years, the scientific community based its estimates on what they learned from foraminife­ra, which are the fossils of tiny marine organisms found in sediment cores taken from the ocean floor.

The foraminife­ra form calcareous shells called tests in which the content of oxygen-18 depends on the temperatur­e of the water in which they live. Changes in the ocean's temperatur­e over time were therefore calculated on the basis of the oxygen-18 content of the fossil foraminife­ra tests found in the sediment.

According to these measuremen­ts, the ocean's temperatur­e has fallen by 15 degrees over the past 100 million years.

All these estimates are based on the principle that the oxygen-18 content of the foraminife­ra tests remained constant while the fossils were lodged in the sediment.

Until now, nothing indicated otherwise: no change is visible to the naked eye or under the microscope, researcher­s said. To test their hypothesis, they exposed these tiny organisms to high temperatur­es in artificial sea water that contained only oxygen-18.

Using a Nano SIMS (nanoscale secondary ion mass spectromet­er), an instrument used to run very smallscale chemical analyses, they then observed the incorporat­ion of oxygen-18 in the calcareous shells.

The results, published in the journal Nature Communicat­ions, show that the level of oxygen-18 present in the foraminife­ra tests can in fact change without leaving a visible trace, thereby challengin­g the reliabilit­y of their use as a thermomete­r.

 ??  ?? The research says climate change may be worse than believed.
The research says climate change may be worse than believed.

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