The earth is now on the brink of entering another
Ice Age, according to a large and compelling body of evidence from
within the field of climate science. Many sources of data which provide
our knowledge base of long-term climate change indicate that the warm,
twelve thousand year-long Holocene period will rather soon be coming to
an end, and then the earth will return to Ice Age conditions for the
next 100,000 years.
Ice cores, ocean sediment
cores, the geologic record, and studies of ancient plant and animal
populations all demonstrate a regular cyclic pattern of Ice Age glacial
maximums which each last about 100,000 years, separated by intervening
warm interglacials, each lasting about 12,000 years.
Most
of the long-term climate data collected from various sources also shows
a strong correlation with the three astronomical cycles which are
together known as the Milankovich cycles. The three Milankovich cycles
include the tilt of the earth, which varies over a 41,000 year period;
the shape of the earth’s orbit, which changes over a period of 100,000
years; and the Precession of the Equinoxes, also known as the earth’s
‘wobble’, which gradually rotates the direction of the earth’s axis
over a period of 26,000 years. According to the Milankovich theory of
Ice Age causation, these three astronomical cycles, each of which
effects the amount of solar radiation which reaches the earth, act
together to produce the cycle of cold Ice Age maximums and warm
interglacials.
Elements of the astronomical
theory of Ice Age causation were first presented by the French
mathematician Joseph Adhemar in 1842, it
was developed
further by the English prodigy Joseph Croll in 1875, and the theory was
established in its present form by the Czech mathematician Milutin
Milankovich in the 1920s and 30s. In 1976 the prestigious journal
“Science” published a landmark paper by John Imbrie, James Hays, and
Nicholas Shackleton entitled “Variations in the Earth's orbit:
Pacemaker of the Ice Ages,” which described the correlation which the
trio of scientist/authors had found between the climate data obtained
from ocean sediment cores and the patterns of the astronomical
Milankovich cycles. Since the late 1970s, the Milankovich theory has
remained the predominant theory to account for Ice Age causation among
climate scientists, and hence the Milankovich theory is always
described in textbooks of climatology and in encyclopaedia articles
about the Ice Ages.
In their 1976 paper Imbrie,
Hays, and Shackleton wrote that their own climate forecasts, which were
based on sea-sediment cores and the Milankovich cycles, "… must be
qualified in two ways. First, they apply only to the natural component
of future climatic trends - and not to anthropogenic effects such as
those due to the burning of fossil fuels. Second, they describe only
the long-term trends, because they are linked to orbital variations
with periods of 20,000 years and longer. Climatic oscillations at
higher frequencies are not predicted... the results indicate that the
long-term trend over the next 20,000 years is towards extensive
Northern Hemisphere glaciation and cooler climate."
During
the 1970s the famous American astronomer Carl Sagan and other
scientists began promoting the theory that ‘greenhouse gasses’ such as
carbon dioxide, or CO2, produced by human industries could lead to
catastrophic global warming. Since the 1970s the theory of
‘anthropogenic global warming’ (AGW) has gradually become accepted
as fact by most of the academic establishment, and their acceptance of
AGW has inspired a global movement to encourage governments to make
pivotal changes to prevent the worsening of AGW.
The
central piece of evidence that is cited in support of the AGW theory is
the famous ‘hockey stick’ graph which was presented by Al Gore in his
2006 film “An Inconvenient Truth.” The ‘hockey stick’ graph shows an
acute upward spike in global temperatures which began during the 1970s
and continued through the winter of 2006/07. However, this warming
trend was interrupted when the winter of 2007/8 delivered the deepest
snow cover to the Northern Hemisphere since 1966 and the coldest
temperatures since 2001. It now appears that the current Northern
Hemisphere winter of 2008/09 will probably equal or surpass the winter
of 2007/08 for both snow depth and cold temperatures.
The
main flaw in the AGW theory is that its proponents focus on evidence
from only the past one thousand years at most, while ignoring the
evidence from the past million years -- evidence which is essential for
a true understanding of climatology. The data from paleoclimatology
provides us with an alternative and more credible explanation for the
recent global temperature spike, based on the natural cycle of Ice Age
maximums and interglacials.
In 1999 the British
journal “Nature” published the results of data derived from glacial ice
cores collected at the Russia ’s Vostok station in Antarctica during
the 1990s. The Vostok ice core data includes a record of global
atmospheric temperatures, atmospheric CO2 and other greenhouse gases,
and airborne particulates starting from 420,000 years ago and
continuing through history up to our present time.
The graph of the Vostok ice core data shows that the Ice Age maximums and the warm interglacials occur within a regular cyclic
pattern, the graph-line of which is similar to the rhythm of a
heartbeat on an electrocardiogram tracing. The Vostok data graph also
shows that changes in global CO2 levels lag behind global temperature
changes by about eight hundred years. What that indicates is that
global temperatures precede or cause global CO2 changes, and not the
reverse. In other words, increasing atmospheric CO2 is not causing
global temperature to rise; instead the natural cyclic increase in
global temperature is causing global CO2 to rise.
The
reason that global CO2 levels rise and fall in response to the global
temperature is because cold water is capable of retaining more CO2 than
warm water. That is why carbonated beverages loose their carbonation,
or CO2, when stored in a warm environment. We store our carbonated soft
drinks, wine, and beer in a cool place to prevent them from loosing
their ‘fizz’, which is a feature of their carbonation, or CO2 content.
The earth is currently warming as a result of the natural Ice Age
cycle, and as the oceans get warmer, they release increasing amounts of
CO2 into the atmosphere.
Because the release of
CO2 by the warming oceans lags behind the changes in the earth’s
temperature, we should expect to see global CO2 levels continue to rise
for another eight hundred years after the end of the earth’s current
Interglacial warm period. We should already be eight hundred years into
the coming Ice Age before global CO2 levels begin to drop in response
to the increased chilling of the world’s oceans.
The
Vostok ice core data graph reveals that global CO2 levels regularly
rose and fell in a direct response to the natural cycle of Ice Age
minimums and maximums during the past four hundred and twenty thousand
years. Within that natural cycle, about every 110,000 years global
temperatures, followed by global CO2 levels, have peaked at
approximately the same levels which they are at today.
About
325,000 years ago, at the peak of a warm interglacial, global
temperature and CO2 levels were higher than they are today. Today we
are again at the peak, and near to the end, of a warm interglacial, and
the earth is now due to enter the next Ice Age. If we are lucky, we may
have a few years to prepare for it. The Ice Age will return, as it
always has, in its regular and natural cycle, with or without any
influence from the effects of AGW.
The AGW
theory is based on data that is drawn from a ridiculously narrow span
of time and it demonstrates a wanton disregard for the ‘big picture’ of
long-term climate change. The data from paleoclimatology, including ice
cores, sea sediments, geology, paleobotany and zoology, indicate that
we are on the verge of entering another Ice Age, and the data also
shows that severe and lasting climate change can occur within only a
few years. While concern over the dubious threat of Anthropogenic
Global Warming continues to distract the attention of people throughout
the world, the very real threat of the approaching and inevitable Ice
Age, which will render large parts of the Northern Hemisphere
uninhabitable, is being foolishly ignored.
Gregory F. Fegel