性闻联播

Million-year-old Arctic sedimentary record sheds light on climate mystery, UMass Amherst researchers find

New research, led by the 性闻联播 Amherst and published recently in the journal , is the first to provide a continuous look at a shift in climate, called the Mid-Pleistocene Transition, that has puzzled scientists. Kurt Lindberg, the paper鈥檚 first author and currently a graduate student at the University at Buffalo, was only an undergraduate when he completed the research as part of a team that included world-renowned climate scientists at UMass Amherst.

Image of Lake El麓gygytgyn from above.
Lake El麓gygytgyn. Credit: UMass Amherst

Somewhere around 1.2 million years ago, a dramatic shift in the Earth鈥檚 climate, known as the Mid-Pleistocene Transition, or MPT, happened. Previously, ice ages had occurred, with relative regularity, every 40,000 years or so. But then, in a comparatively short window of geological time, the time between ice ages more than doubled, to every 100,000 years. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a real puzzle,鈥 says , professor of geosciences at UMass Amherst and one of the paper鈥檚 co-authors. 鈥淣o one really knows why this shift occurred.鈥

One of the big barriers to understanding the MPT is that very little data exists. The oldest Arctic ice cores only go back approximately 125,000 years. And older sedimentary cores are almost nonexistent, because as ice ages have come and gone, the advancing and retreating ice sheets have acted like enormous bulldozers, scraping much of the exposed land down to bedrock.

Kurt Lindberg (class of 2020) analyzing ancient Lake El鈥檊ygytgyn sediments for vegetation and past temperature reconstruction.
Kurt Lindberg (class of 2020) analyzing ancient Lake El鈥檊ygytgyn sediments for vegetation and past temperature reconstruction. Credit: William Daniels

However, there is one place in the world, in far northeastern Russia, that is both above the Arctic Circle and which has never been covered by glaciers: Lake El鈥檊ygytgyn. This is where the world-renowned polar scientist, , professor of geosciences at UMass Amherst and one of the paper鈥檚 co-authors, comes in.

In 2009, Brigham-Grette , where they drilled a 685.5 meter sediment core, representing approximately the last 3.6 million years of Earth鈥檚 history. Lindberg and his co-authors used the portion of this sedimentary core that spanned the MPT and looked for specific biomarkers that could help them ascertain temperature and vegetation. With this information, they were able to reconstruct, for the first time, climactic conditions in the Arctic during the MPT.

False-color image of Lake El鈥檊ygytgyn, taken by the Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) on NASA鈥檚 Terra satellite on August 18, 2008 (red indicates vegetation, gray-brown indicates bare land, and deep blue indicates water).
False-color image of Lake El鈥檊ygytgyn, taken by the Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) on NASA鈥檚 Terra satellite on August 18, 2008 (red indicates vegetation, gray-brown indicates bare land, and deep blue indicates water). Credit: NASA

While the team did not solve the mystery of the MPT, they did make a few surprising discoveries. For example, an interglacial period, or era when ice was in retreat, known as MIS 31 is widely recognized as having been abnormally warm鈥攁nd yet the records at Lake El鈥檊ygytgyn show only moderate warmth. Instead, three other interglacial periods, MIS 21, 27 and 29 were as warm or warmer. Finally, the team鈥檚 research shows a long-term drying trend throughout the MPT.

鈥淭his couldn鈥檛 have been done without Lindberg鈥檚 enthusiasm,鈥 says Casta帽eda. 鈥淚鈥檝e always had lots of undergrads in my lab, and I love working with them. Kurt took off with this project, and did a wonderful job.鈥