Publication | Closed Access
Pacemaking the Ice Ages by Frequency Modulation of Earth's Orbital Eccentricity
145
Citations
9
References
1999
Year
Milankovitch CycleEngineeringGlacial ProcessEarth System ScienceEarth ScienceGeophysicsOrbital EccentricityEccentricity-related VariationsAtmospheric ScienceGeochronologyFrequency ModulationClimate VariabilityIce-water SystemSea IceCryospherePaleoclimatologyClimate SystemOrbital InclinationEarth's ClimateClimate DynamicsClimatologyIce AgesAstrochronology
Evidence from power spectra of deep-sea oxygen isotope time series suggests that the climate system of Earth responds nonlinearly to astronomical forcing by frequency modulating eccentricity-related variations in insolation. With the help of a simple model, it is shown that frequency modulation of the approximate 100,000-year eccentricity cycles by the 413,000-year component accounts for the variable duration of the ice ages, the multiple-peak character of the time series spectra, and the notorious absence of significant spectral amplitude at the 413,000-year period. The observed spectra are consistent with the classic Milankovitch theories of insolation, so that climate forcing by 100,000-year variations in orbital inclination that cause periodic dust accretion appear unnecessary.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1