As the levels of CO2 declined, so did the temperature, and with the temperature declines, the formation of polar ice caps and glaciation. — Bitter Crank
Mammals, by the way, weren't around in the Carboniferous period -- they appeared around the time the dinosaurs appeared (within 10 million years). — Bitter Crank
I'm all fascinated by the emergence of mammals these days, so I came across this odd piece of information about the Carboniferous period: atmospheric CO2 concentration was around 800 ppm (twice the present level, but down from 7000 ppm earlier in the evolution of life). Yet the mean surface temperature was 14C. It's now 14C.
Anybody know why this is? — frank
Also, CO2 forcing is a logarithmic function of concentration rather than a linear function). — Pierre-Normand
Would you say this is a more significant factor than the impact of glaciation? — frank
It's hard to see how solar forcing would be a significant factor in large scale ice ages, which come and go. We're in one now, obviously.Over large timescales, glaciation is an effect rather than a cause. Snow and ice albedo functions as a feedback. It's the sum of the forcings (mainly greenhouse gas forcing and solar forcing) that is the independent variable and that determines whether or not glaciation is supported. When glaciation is supported by a low enough total forcing, glaciation ensues and the snow/ice albedo feedback lowers the temperature even further. — Pierre-Normand
Are you sure you're thinking of the Carboniferous? That was only 300 million years ago. — frank
One estimate that I've seen is that the total solar irradiance increased by about 4% over the lase 400 million years ago. — Pierre-Normand
It's hard to see how solar forcing would be a significant factor in large scale ice ages, which come and go. We're in one now, obviously. — frank
Does solar luminosity vary significantly over time?
One mustn't confuse the glacial/interglacial periods that are occurring within the current ice age with major ice ages. The former is governed by the Milankovitch cycles and is modulated by the ice albedo and carbon cycle feedbacks. — Pierre-Normand
Indeed it does. As I pointed out above, the variation over the last 300 million years is equivalent to a fourfold decrease in CO2 concentration. — Pierre-Normand
s I pointed out above, the variation over the last 300 million years is equivalent to a fourfold decrease in CO2 concentration. — Pierre-Normand
It would have to actually oscillate to track large scale ice ages. — frank
and not any one single factor in isolation. — Pierre-Normand
thats actually the entire problem of averages in one sentence, because before man-generated co2 since the atmosphere was first cooled down by plants consuming co2 and generating oxygen, sun radiation has been a larger varying factor, as well as, of course, cloud cover, which is almost entrely unkowable. — ernestm
Of course. And about the faint young sun paradox? — frank
Also, you'd be one of those people asking Socrates: what is the point of asking what clouds are . — frank
[Tectonics and Paleoclimate ----> http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/carboniferous/carbtect.html ]The Carboniferous was marked by the progressive formation of the supercontinent Pangea. The present day Northern Hemisphere landmasses moved towards the equator to form Laurasia and to join the large Southern Hemisphere landmass Gondwana. The collision between Siberia and Eastern Europe created the Ural Mountains, and China was formed with the collision of several microcontinents and Siberia. The collision between Gondwana and Laurasia led to the formation of the Appalachian belt in North America and the Hercynian Mountains in Europe. Gondwana also shifted towards the equator while the continents moved from east to west.
The problem in the OP stemmed from only considering CO2 variation and ignoring solar variations. The faint young sum paradox stemmed from only considering solar variations and ignoring CO2 variation. Taking into account both solar and CO2 forcing solves both problems. — Pierre-Normand
Another factor: Did it make any difference that the distribution of land was much different during the carboniferous? The continents were not distributed, but were clumped together: — Bitter Crank
Socrates was asking because he wanted to see if the people talking knew what they were talking about. Most often they did not. So that's the point to Socrates asking what clouds are, to demonstrate that the people talking about clouds didn't really know what they were talking about, because they couldn't even say what clouds are. — Metaphysician Undercover
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