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Ancient Superflood Brought Climate Chaos
ABC Science News ^ | 8-15-2003 | Bob Beale

Posted on 08/15/2003 8:08:56 AM PDT by blam

Ancient superflood brought climate chaos

Bob Beale
ABC Science Online
Friday, 15 August 2003

A 'superflood' created by the bursting of a huge lake may have triggered climatic chaos

A catastrophic 'superflood' following the rupture of a massive glacier-dammed lake in Canada at the end of the Ice Age probably plunged the world into centuries of climatic chaos.

That single event was likely responsible for the most dramatic climate change of the last 10,000 years, according to a report by a Canadian team led by Professor Garry Clarke, a geophysicist at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, which appears today in the journal Science.

The 'superflood' was enough to alter ocean circulation in the Northern Hemisphere: analysis of ice cores taken in Greenland reveal that for the next 200 years or so, the mean temperature dropped by 5°C, snow accumulation decreased sharply and forest fires became more frequent.

Clarke's team found that the water body, known as Lake Agassiz, reached a massive 163,000 cubic km in volume - at least double that of the largest contemporary lake, the Caspian Sea - and that its release was "by far the largest known glacial outburst of the past 100,000 years".

It was formed after the vast Laurentide Ice Sheet, which at its maximum formed a 3-kilometre-thick dome over Hudson Bay, began disintegrating rapidly about 8,500 years ago.

As the ice sheet retreated north, it left behind a large depressed area of land. This sloped towards the former ice dome and gradually filled with meltwater and run-off from precipitation to become Lake Agassiz.

But icebergs and remnants of the ice sheet dammed the lake, which at its maximum elevation had a natural 'spillway' about 230 m above sea level, the researchers said.

"Modern analogues and the known physics of outburst flooding indicate that tunnelling below the ice is the most probable flood release mechanism," Clarke said.

"Because ice floats on water, thinning ice dams are unstable. Initiation of a flood routed beneath the ice therefore pre-empts the possibility of a flood routed across the ice. Once a subglacial path is established, an ice-walled conduit will tend to grow by melting its walls," he added.

As water tunnelled its way through the ice dam, its rupture became unavoidable. The team said that on the basis of radiocarbon dating, a full torrent was finally unleashed about 8,450 years ago. It took less than a year to discharge.

After the lake water gushed into the Hudson Bay, its freshness altered the strength of ocean circulation, which in turn caused the abrupt climate changes in much of the Northern Hemisphere, the team said.

Geological evidence suggests that this first flood was followed by a smaller one from a lower water level of about 125 m, either because the lake was drained by two successive outbursts or because the first flood drained it to sea level or because the ice-dam reformed and allowed it to partly refill before breaking again.

Either way, once the dam had been permanently breached, the discharge that formerly overflowed to the St Lawrence Valley was routed northward to Hudson Bay.

The researchers argue that understanding the mechanisms underlying past climate change events is increasingly important as people grow more concerned about the magnitude and rate of future climate change.

"Changes in the volume and extent of the ice sheets that once covered much of North America directly influenced the freshwater balance of the North Atlantic and are implicated in many abrupt climate events of the past 100,000 years," the researchers wrote.

"During the last Ice Age, when a kilometres-thick ice sheet covered most of Canada and parts of the northern United States, armadas of icebergs were episodically launched into the North Atlantic. The melting of this freshwater ice and the associated freshening of ocean surface waters are believed to have changed the strength of the oceanic thermohaline circulation, thereby causing abrupt climate changes," they said.

Related Stories Climate change boosting flood and drought: experts, News in Science 3 Mar 2003 Super-cyclones could devastate Ausralian coast, News in Science 5 Oct 2001 El Niño has never been this bad, News in Science 29 Jan 2001


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: ancient; chaos; climate; climatechange; environment; flood; godsgravesglyphs
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To: blam
That sort of thing would have to include a claim that this "superflood" caused the extinction of the large North American animals at the end of the last ice age. The problem is, that the same kinds of animals went extinct in Europe and Asia at about the same time. That argues for a global event, as opposed to something in Canada. I still like the story in Genesis better.
21 posted on 08/15/2003 8:39:43 AM PDT by martianagent
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To: blam
Scientists Rewrite Laws Of Glacial Erosion
22 posted on 08/15/2003 8:41:50 AM PDT by blam
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To: blam
I wonder what the effect would have been at Windover? I believe that culture was contemporary to the Agassiz event.
23 posted on 08/15/2003 8:43:32 AM PDT by shamusotoole
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To: blam
Map of Lake Agassiz


24 posted on 08/15/2003 8:46:12 AM PDT by Between the Lines ("What Goes Into the Mind Comes Out in a Life")
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To: martianagent
I'm with you!
25 posted on 08/15/2003 8:48:34 AM PDT by LiteKeeper
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To: coloradan
dam Canada
26 posted on 08/15/2003 8:49:51 AM PDT by aardvark1
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To: shamusotoole
"I wonder what the effect would have been at Windover? I believe that culture was contemporary to the Agassiz event."

I don't know...that crossed my mind too.

I have some 7,000 year old wood from a coastal forest that went underwater in NW Florida (Santa Rosa Sound) about 7,000 years ago. I suspect there were a number of 'floods' like this one in a number of, still unidentified, places in the world.

27 posted on 08/15/2003 8:51:46 AM PDT by blam
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To: blam
Ancient superflood brought climate chaos: women and minorities hardest hit.
28 posted on 08/15/2003 8:55:02 AM PDT by freedomcrusader
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To: Aric2000; BMCDA; CobaltBlue; Condorman; Dimensio; Doctor Stochastic; donh; general_re; Gumlegs; ...
Neat stuff ping.
29 posted on 08/15/2003 8:56:12 AM PDT by balrog666 (Against logic there is no armor like ignorance.)
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To: blam
There is evidence of three such floods, one about twice the size of the others. I don't have the dates and numbers for the serial sea-level rises handy, but the rises each took perhaps two weeks and raised sea levels instantly 100 to 200 feet worldwide.
30 posted on 08/15/2003 9:00:26 AM PDT by RightWhale (Repeal the Law of the Excluded Middle)
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To: freedomcrusader
Ancient superflood brought climate chaos: women and minorities hardest hit.

Could we have a commission investigate this and provide suggestions how to protect minorities in future catastrophes?

Gum

31 posted on 08/15/2003 9:02:04 AM PDT by ChewedGum ( http://king-of-fools.blogspot.com)
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To: blam
Another nail in the coffin of the gradualism theory of climatic and geomorphic change. Aside from the inconsistency of the "Solar Constant", its hard to see any mechanisms for slow changes in climate such as we are now experiencing. Certainly, the "evil capitalism did it" theory won't survive the currently popular hysteria and political expediency.
32 posted on 08/15/2003 9:06:01 AM PDT by centurion316
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To: blam
was this great flood of noah's time...
33 posted on 08/15/2003 9:06:56 AM PDT by Bill Davis FR
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To: blam
The Lake Missoula floods sure dropped property values in my neighborhood during the waning years of the last Ice Age. Nothing like a 1500 foot high wall of water to rearrange the landscape.
34 posted on 08/15/2003 9:16:00 AM PDT by Noumenon (Crush the Left, see them driven before you, hear the lamentations of the metrosexuals.)
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To: Always Right
And here I thought SUV drivers were responsible for all climate change.....

That's right. Fred Flintstone and his pals got the ball rolling. Nothing's been right since.

35 posted on 08/15/2003 9:18:35 AM PDT by Noumenon (Crush the Left, see them driven before you, hear the lamentations of the metrosexuals.)
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To: balrog666
Neat stuff ping.

Yeah, now we get to see adults seriously discussing Noah and his ark as a historical fact. Not many places you can still see that.

36 posted on 08/15/2003 9:20:23 AM PDT by Physicist
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To: Bill Davis FR
was this great flood of noah's time...

Probably not - the flood story here would have to:

1) Become part of aboriginal American folklore;
2) Somehow get all the way to the Middle East, with no one to get it there;
3) Become part of those cultures;
4) Wind up as part of their religious traditions and thence the Bible.

So far, the Black Sea flood referenced earlier is the best candidate for the story's origin (unless one is a literalist).

It would seem that the nature of climatic change is indeed taking on a resemblance to Stephen Jay Gould's puncutated equilibrium model - periods of relative quiet interspersed with rapid, often catastrophic events that drive the changes themselves.

Snidely

37 posted on 08/15/2003 9:27:12 AM PDT by Snidely Whiplash
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To: blam
Yeah, but what did Bush know and when did he know it?

where are the WMDs dammit!

38 posted on 08/15/2003 9:51:31 AM PDT by Publius6961 (Californians are as dumm as a sack of rocks)
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To: Physicist
placemarker
39 posted on 08/15/2003 9:51:55 AM PDT by Aric2000 (If the history of science shows us anything, it is that we get nowhere by labeling our ignorance god)
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To: Prof Engineer
I blame Global Warming.

I thought it was George W's fault.

Both of which have the initials "G W". Coincidence? I think not!

40 posted on 08/15/2003 9:55:58 AM PDT by r9etb
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