The Toba super-eruption: Micro-scale traces of a global
Transcription
The Toba super-eruption: Micro-scale traces of a global
The Toba super-eruption: Micro-scale traces of a global-scale climate event? Kim M. Cobb Stacy Carolin, Jessica Moerman, Ellery Ingall, Luke Chambers, Amelia Longo Georgia Inst. of Technology Nele Meckler, Jess F. Adkins Caltech Lydia Finney Argonne National Lab Victoria Smith Oxford Syria Lejau, Jenny Malang, Brian Clark, Alison Pritchard Gunung Mulu National Park Andrew Tuen University Sans Malaysia Explosive eruptions tear apart the f producing fine pyroclasts (hot fra solidified melt (i.e. glass) and crystal hot, buoyant, pyroclast-bearing g Plinian eruption column that they of large explosive eruptions (Wilso and Blake 2008 this issue). The mi clasts leaves the volcanic vent and e near-magmatic temperatures. It imm heats air, rises buoyantly to heights t 73.88 ± 0.6 kybp and then spreads laterally as a giant (Storey etThe al.,fragments 2012) return t stratosphere. ferent ways (Wilson 2008). Some fal the eruption column 3 DREand blanket th ~3,000km fall deposits). More energetic and im however, are the hot and highly flui can VEImove of 8across the ground surfac dreds of kilometers per hour, coveri sands of square kilometers with ash The Toba super-eruption: Mulu IMMEDIACY AND MAGNITU OF THE THREAT? The consequences of future super portrayed in dramatic fashion in th are discussed by Self and Blake (200 tions are “the ultimate geologic ha immediate and devastating impact o our social Miller and Winfrastructure, ark, 2008 and with re climatic effects that will arise from l with sulfur-rich gases. There is, how sorts: the global frequency of volca Likely extent of ash cloud (thick dashed line) and of pyro- Relative eruption magnitudes bed in terms of mass st, can be described he pre-vesiculation, nsities range from somewhat greater ks, which have den- ve eruptions) – this less dense than the roughly 103 kg m-3) s surface, commonly wo to three times he material. Miller and Wark, 2008 he mass of erupted Relative volumes of pyroclastic material erupted at four young volcanoes, compared with volumes of three supereruptions discussed in this issue. The two most recent eruptions shown, from Mount St. Helens and Mount Pinatubo, each caused FIGURE 1 Did Toba play a role in an observed “bottleneck” in human mitochondrial genetic diversity? Maybe. [Ambrose 1998] No. [Petraglia et al., 2007] see review by Williams et al., 2012 H. floresiensis Volcanoes impact AND global climate: Instrumental 54data VOLCANIC ERUPTIONS CLIMATE 1 100x smaller than Toba 300x smaller than Toba Kelly et al., 1996 y global-mean surface air temperature profiles for: (a) the Krakatau eruption (1883); (b) PelQ, Soufribre and Santa Maria g (1963); (d) El Chichon (1982); (e) composite based on events (a-d); and (0 Pinatubo (1991). The data are expressed as rees Celsius from the appropriate monthly mean for the 5 years preceding month zero, the January of the eruption year. The dashed horiontal line indicates the 5 percent significance level Volcanoes impact global climate: Paleoclimate data rmation from Paleoclimate Archives Chapt (a) reconstructed (grey) and simulated (red/blue) NH temperature Strong solar variability simulations 0.5 0.0 (b) 1000 MCA Weak solar variability simulations 1200 Volcanic forcing (W m-2) Volcanic forcing (W m-2) 0 1400 Time (Year CE) 1600 (d) 0.2 0.2 0.0 0.0 1800 20C 2000 IPCC, 2013 data-model comparison provides critical-0.2constraint on -0.2 climate sensitivity: temperature response to change -0.4 -0.4 -4in radiative forcing -0.6 -0.6 -2 -6 -0.8 -1.0 Forcing Volcanic forcing coincident with solar variability -0.8 -1.0 Forcing Temperature ) Temperature ) (c) LIA Solar forcing (W m-2) -0.5 Forcing Temperature ) Temperature anomaly (°C) 1.0 (b) 1000 MCA 1200 (d) 1800 or data? -0.2 (Mann et al., 2012, 2013; Anchukaitis et al., 2012) -0.4 Multi-decadal volcanic activity -0.6 -40 -20 0 20 40 Year from peak forcing m1-1-P M5-SW M5A-P O-Mk3L -ESM-P CSM1.4 IROC-P CCSM3 Mk3L-P dCM3-P ALS-g1 -E2R-P SM4-P -CM3.3 AM5-SS CHO-G 0 5 10 Year from peak forcing treecps a08cpsl treecps He07tls h13pcar u07cvm 09regm Lj10cps min7eivf a08eivl 05wave M08ave -5 (Timmreck et al., 2010) 1.0 -0.8 -1.0 Forcing -0.0 Volca coinc solar T -0.0 -0.2 -0.4 -0.6 -40 Multi-decadal solar va -20 0 Year from peak for M5-SW AM5-SS IROC-P dCM3-P -CM3.3 O-Mk3L ALS-g1 -E2R-P Individual volcanic events -0.8 NH temperature anomaly (°C) -0.4 -0.2 Fact: models tend to cool -0.4 more -0.6 -0.6 than paleoclimate data suggest problem with model? Temperature NH temperature anomaly (°C) -0.2 -0.4 -1.0 Forcing -0.0 -0.2 0.0 O12glac a08eivl 09regm a08cpsl Lj10cps h13pcar u07cvm min7eivf 05wave -6 0.0 Solar forcing (W m-2) Volcanic forcing (W m-2) Volcanic forcing (W m-2) -4 Temperature NH temperature anomaly (°C) 1600 0.2 -2 1.0 (c) 1400 Time (Year CE) Volcanoes impact global climate, 0.2 but how much? 0 -0.6 LIA solar variability simulations D10107 Modeling Toba’s effects in CCSM3 ROBOCK ET AL.: DID TOBA PRODUCE GLACIATION? Robock et al., 2009 [6] Another feedback avenue is that the c conditions after the Toba eruption might have of the vegetation on the planet, which in mos dire ffects first 1a0yrs world e would havein produced higher surface a could have then led to further cooling. We dissipate i n ~ 30yrs hypothesis with a GCM containing a coup vegetation model that includes this feedback. [7] It is the SO2 injections into the strat volcanic eruptions that cause climate change, ing sulfate aerosol particles remain for a few y out solar radiation and cooling the surface [R Jones et al. [2005] assumed that the SO2 e Toba was 100 times that of Pinatubo, but other it closer to 300 times Pinatubo [Bekki et al., 1996; 2002]. Would such a larger volcanic forcin more likely to produce an ice age? To answer we ran a GCM with a range of forcings: 33, 1 900 times the Pinatubo forcing. [8] The Toba eruption certainly must hav cant impacts on stratospheric chemistry, wh affected ozone and other gases, with a chem to prolong or enhance the forcing. To test thi we also conducted an experiment with a m cludes these chemistry feedbacks, using the scenario, 300 times Pinatubo. BEFORE missing memory in snow/ice or vegeta9on? need to look regionally? and at δ18OR +1-‐4yr Robock et al., 2009 40 Modeling Toba’s effects inC. Timmreck MPI-ESM et al. / Quaternary International 258 (201 Scatter plot of maximum cooling (K) versus length of perturbation (years) for Timmreck et Fig. al., 11. 2012 the global average and the four specific regions (indicated by different symbols) and for different volcanoes (indicated by different colors) based on monthly mean values. The length of perturbation indicates the time from the start of the eruption until the Other para overestimating global distribu on the initial s time of the YT by running the La Niña oscilla Uncertainti The assumed d Certainly, the duration of the 10, but the mi pulses would or if the inject probably erup the extreme m of the erupti (Herzog and ignimbrite plu the formation vertical tracer simulations, sh NBH i.e. the a Borneo stalagmites as records of regional climate and environmental history stalagmite oxygen isotope records reproducible GREENLAND HULU reveal large millennial-scale excursions (Heinrich events) MULU Carolin et al., Science 2013 18 Fig. 2. Comparison of Borneo stalagmite δ O records to climate forcings and GS20 largest anomaly associated with Toba super-eruption also captured as out-sized event in Hulu stalagmite oxygen isotopes 40Ar/39Ar Toba date 18 Figure 2. Comparison of Borneo stalagmite δ O records to climate forcings and records of 18 paleoclimate from key regions. (A) Greenland NGRIP ice core δ O plotted using the 18 GICC05modelext age model (Wolff et al., 2010). Greenland Stadialto#20 (GS20) is indicated Fig. 2. Comparison of Borneo stalagmite δ O records climate forcings and by a 18 The handf records of tropica through the Toba wet -10 Borneo caves Carolin eoft-time t al., 2013 conflictin -9.5 regional climate e dry -9 sediment core fro shows no sign of -8.5 wet associated with th Hulu/ while it capt Wang et even al., 2001 -8 Sanbao al., 2008 recorded dry Wang et changes -7 Similarly, Lane e 40Ar/39Ar(( major climate ano -6 Toba(date( Toba ash layer in ash layer in South China Sea (located over 700 stalagmites only 1 South corresponds to initiation of warm 27.0 Huang emillennial-scale t al., 2001 China δ 306 S.-R. Song SST et al. / Marine Geology 167 (2000) 303–312 cooler reconstructed 26.5 Sea samples that is re of dark subhedral biotite and rarer hornblende crystal. cold 26.0 magnitude (Carol The gradational contacts of the tephra layer with host sediments in the top and bottom are a total of 20 cm in mirrored in sever thickness. This suggests that the tephra had been reworked by bottom current and biotubation, which δ18O records (Wa likely diffused the tephra within the host sediments. NGRIP warm (Figure 1). Situat Two size fractions (63–150 and !150 !m) were -40 NGRIP, proxy 2004 record from separated and sampled for morphological and geochemical analyses. -42 cold sharp, prolonged -44glass shards was studied by The morphology of the 2cm layer of Tob the Riguku Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) at -47 the Department of Geology, National Taiwan Univeral., 2001). warm -48 71 74 77 80 δ18O (‰) GS20 δ18O (‰) SST(°C) δ18O (‰) A closer look 68 δ18O (‰) 65 200µm sity. The major element compositions of the glass EDML shards and mineral grains were determined using a -49 JEOL JXA-8900R Electron Micro-Probe Analyzer Earth syst cold of Earth Sciences, Academia (EPMA) at the Institute ice$core$$ EPICA, 2 006 sized eruption wo Sinica, Taiwan. Operating conditions were sulfate$peaks$ 15 kV, Svensson e t al., Earth’s 2012 climat 10 nA and were focused ("1 !m) for accelerated on 71 The74data 77 80 voltage, probe current and65 beam 68 diameter. Timmreck et al., were processed using the ZAF correction routine. Age (kybp) Trace elements and REE were determined by Inducsize, duration, an Figure 1.Spectrometry Potential (ICP-MS) signatures of the Toba tively Coupled Plasma-Mass 18 climatic impacts super-eruption in: Borneo using a Perkin–Elmer Elan-6000 spectrometer at the stalagmite δ O 68 71 74 -10 Borneo caves -9.5 -9 -8.5 δ18O (‰) Hulu/ -8 Sanbao -7 27.0 26.5 South China Sea 26.0 NGRIP -40 -42 -44 GS20 multiple sulfate peaks in Antarctic ice core tied to sulfate peaks in Greenland à relationship to Toba eruption(s)? δ18O (‰) SST(°C) -6 warm EDML The handf records of tropica through the Toba wet Carolin eoft-time t al., 2013 conflictin regional climate e dry sediment core fro shows no sign of wet associated with th while it capt Wang et even al., 2001 al., 2008 recorded dry Wang et changes Similarly, Lane e 40Ar/39Ar(( major climate ano Toba(date( Toba ash layer in (located over 700 stalagmites only 1 warm Huang emillennial-scale t al., 2001 δ samples that is re cold magnitude (Carol mirrored in sever δ18O records (Wa warm (Figure 1). Situat NGRIP, proxy 2004 record from cold sharp, prolonged 2cm layer of Tob -47 al., 2001). -48 77 80 -49 cold ice$core$$ sulfate$peaks$ 65 68 71 74 77 80 δ18O (‰) A closer look δ18O (‰) 65 Earth syst EPICA, 2006 sized eruption wo Svensson et on al., Earth’s 2012 climat Age (kybp) Figure 1. Potential signatures of the Toba 18 super-eruption in: Borneo stalagmite δ O Timmreck et al., size, duration, an climatic impacts Research questions: 1) How many times did Toba erupt ~74,000yrs ago? And with what relative sizes? 2) What were the regional climate impacts of the eruption(s)? 3) Did the Toba-related climate effects in Borneo occur before, during, or after the initiation of pronounced regional drying? Approach: A Find the volcanic markers in the Borneo stalagmites. Compare to oxygen isotope-based climate record in same stalagmites. B Available stalagmites 18 re 4. Photos of candidate stalagmite samples for the reconstruction of high-resolution δ O and ed geochemical markers. High-precision U/Th dates are denoted in yellow, in kybp (individual a Preliminary synchrotron Fe data U/Th%date% 73,636±305yrs% Toba%ash%40Ar/39Ar%age%=% 73,880±640yrs%% (Storey%et%al.,%2012)% ect/) s n a r )t g n li samp on) 3 c e ir )d h t w gro Fe%layer% (Toba?)% U/Th%date% 80,758±208yrs% Fe%layers% (known%hiatus)% Preliminary SIMS Sulfur profile ~550yrs initiation of steep δ18O shift in bulk data 10µm beam = ~2.2yrs 20µm sampling res = 4yrs data from Stacy Carolin Next steps: Geochemically fingerprint i) Toba ash ii) Mulu clays concentrations of iron. Raw counts in th background signal of the stalagmite. Ligh change in the crystallographic orientation perfectly aligned with the growth/samplin dating samples, with resulting dates, are the sample from the material removed for indicated by green arrows. The radiometr Compare to synchrotron/SIMS scans across Toba horizon (Fe, Si, S, Br, K, Al) other volcanic ashes K2O%wt%%% *see review by Frisia et al., 2012 TOBA ASH CLAYS Lane et al., 2013 Mermut and Cano, 2001 <1% K2O SiO2%wt%%% Figure 7. Plot illustrating the Fig. glas YTT plat elon glas (28. dist pos tinc (26) noe tion gen cisio wit as “f ge pr cla 70 (F (C an fro cla