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February
18, 2007 Poulsen will discuss
his findings
in a symposium titled "Geosystems: Climate Lessons from Earth's Last
Great
Icehouse" at the annual meeting of the American Association for the
Advancement of Science in The changes occurred
during the
period of Earth's history when the continents were consolidated into a
single
supercontinent, Pangaea. Toward the end of the Paleozoic Era, tropical
regions
of Pangaea became much warmer and drier, winds in the region shifted
direction,
and tropical flora drastically changed. At the same time, atmospheric
carbon
dioxide increased and the enormous ice sheets that blanketed
Gondwana---the
landmass that eventually broke up to become present-day South America,
Africa,
Antarctica, India and Australia---began disappearing. "There's lots of
evidence
for large changes in climate and vegetation, but there's been no clear
hypothesis for why those changes occurred," said Poulsen, who is an
assistant professor of geological sciences. A few notions have been
floating
around: some researchers have suggested that the uplifting or erosion
of
mountain chains might have caused the climate shift; others think the
motion of
the plates that make up Earth's outer layer played a role. But Poulsen
had a
different idea. "I wondered whether the melting of the Gondwana ice
sheets
and/or the rise in atmospheric carbon dioxide could explain these
documented
climate and vegetation changes," he said. Poulsen and
coworkers used
theoretical climate models to experiment with different combinations of
carbon
dioxide concentrations and glaciation. "The modeling
simulations
showed that as Gondwana deglaciated and carbon dioxide rose, the
tropics became
more arid and the vegetation was fried and replaced with desert,"
Poulsen
said. "Our results also showed that deglaciation and rising carbon
dioxide
contributed about equally to the observed climate and vegetation
changes." In addition, the
model, which
relied on estimates of carbon dioxide concentrations, produced more
warming
than geological evidence actually indicates. This may suggest that
carbon
dioxide didn't rise quite as much as has been estimated, Poulsen said. Poulsen is cautious
about
applying his conclusions to current climate concerns. "The climate change
I'm
studying happened a long time ago, so you have to be a little careful,
but
certainly this work shows there is a very strong connection between
carbon
dioxide increase and warming," he said. "Another interesting aspect
is that for a long time people have thought that the tropics aren't
really
susceptible to large climate changes. This work shows that the tropics
are
susceptible."
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