* . *
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
Monday, May 19, 2025
Earth-News
  • Home
  • Business
  • Entertainment
    ‘Final Destination: Bloodlines’ tops box office while The Weeknd’s movie falters – Yakima Herald-Republic

    Final Destination: Bloodlines Dominates the Box Office as The Weeknd’s Film Struggles

    Country Music Legend Bids Heartfelt Farewell: ‘Y’all Gonna Make Me Tear Up!

    We won’t get a Game of Thrones show this year: A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms shifts to early 2026 – Entertainment Weekly

    Game of Thrones Fans Will Have to Wait: A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms Delayed Until 2026!

    Nile Entertainment Secures African Rights for Thrilling Action Film ‘Son of the Soil

    Florida Highwaymen movie ‘Legends of the Highway’ based on original 26 Black artists – Treasure Coast News

    Unveiling ‘Legends of the Highway’: A Captivating Film Celebrating the Legacy of Florida’s Original 26 Black Artists

    Alabama to expand Entertainment Industry Incentive Act – WVTM

    Alabama Boosts Entertainment Industry with Expanded Incentive Act!

  • General
  • Health
  • News

    Cracking the Code: Why China’s Economic Challenges Aren’t Shaking Markets, Unlike America’s” – Bloomberg

    Trump’s Narrow Window to Spread the Truth About Harris

    Trump’s Narrow Window to Spread the Truth About Harris

    Israel-Gaza war live updates: Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh assassinated in Iran, group says

    Israel-Gaza war live updates: Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh assassinated in Iran, group says

    PAP Boss to Niger Delta Youths, Stay Away from the Protest

    PAP Boss to Niger Delta Youths, Stay Away from the Protest

    Court Restricts Protests In Lagos To Freedom, Peace Park

    Court Restricts Protests In Lagos To Freedom, Peace Park

    Fans React to Jazz Jennings’ Inspiring Weight Loss Journey

    Fans React to Jazz Jennings’ Inspiring Weight Loss Journey

    Trending Tags

    • Trump Inauguration
    • United Stated
    • White House
    • Market Stories
    • Election Results
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Technology
    Murfreesboro LPR technology helps catch suspect in Henry County homicide case – WKRN News 2

    Murfreesboro LPR technology helps catch suspect in Henry County homicide case – WKRN News 2

    How will BCI technology change the lives of people with disabilities? – news.cgtn.com

    Transforming Lives: The Impact of BCI Technology on People with Disabilities

    Super Speeders are deadly. This technology can slow them down. – Popular Science

    Revolutionary Technology: Taming the Threat of Super Speeders!

    Celebrating Success: Highlights from the Collaborative College for Technology & Leadership Graduation Ceremony

    Philly police unveil strategy to crack down on car meetups utilizing technology – NBC10 Philadelphia

    Philly Police Launch High-Tech Strategy to Tackle Car Meetups!

    Stony Brook Medicine Pioneers Use of AI Technology for Heart Disease Diagnosis on Long Island – SBU News

    Revolutionizing Heart Health: Stony Brook Medicine Leads the Way with AI Technology

    Trending Tags

    • Nintendo Switch
    • CES 2017
    • Playstation 4 Pro
    • Mark Zuckerberg
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business
  • Entertainment
    ‘Final Destination: Bloodlines’ tops box office while The Weeknd’s movie falters – Yakima Herald-Republic

    Final Destination: Bloodlines Dominates the Box Office as The Weeknd’s Film Struggles

    Country Music Legend Bids Heartfelt Farewell: ‘Y’all Gonna Make Me Tear Up!

    We won’t get a Game of Thrones show this year: A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms shifts to early 2026 – Entertainment Weekly

    Game of Thrones Fans Will Have to Wait: A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms Delayed Until 2026!

    Nile Entertainment Secures African Rights for Thrilling Action Film ‘Son of the Soil

    Florida Highwaymen movie ‘Legends of the Highway’ based on original 26 Black artists – Treasure Coast News

    Unveiling ‘Legends of the Highway’: A Captivating Film Celebrating the Legacy of Florida’s Original 26 Black Artists

    Alabama to expand Entertainment Industry Incentive Act – WVTM

    Alabama Boosts Entertainment Industry with Expanded Incentive Act!

  • General
  • Health
  • News

    Cracking the Code: Why China’s Economic Challenges Aren’t Shaking Markets, Unlike America’s” – Bloomberg

    Trump’s Narrow Window to Spread the Truth About Harris

    Trump’s Narrow Window to Spread the Truth About Harris

    Israel-Gaza war live updates: Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh assassinated in Iran, group says

    Israel-Gaza war live updates: Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh assassinated in Iran, group says

    PAP Boss to Niger Delta Youths, Stay Away from the Protest

    PAP Boss to Niger Delta Youths, Stay Away from the Protest

    Court Restricts Protests In Lagos To Freedom, Peace Park

    Court Restricts Protests In Lagos To Freedom, Peace Park

    Fans React to Jazz Jennings’ Inspiring Weight Loss Journey

    Fans React to Jazz Jennings’ Inspiring Weight Loss Journey

    Trending Tags

    • Trump Inauguration
    • United Stated
    • White House
    • Market Stories
    • Election Results
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Technology
    Murfreesboro LPR technology helps catch suspect in Henry County homicide case – WKRN News 2

    Murfreesboro LPR technology helps catch suspect in Henry County homicide case – WKRN News 2

    How will BCI technology change the lives of people with disabilities? – news.cgtn.com

    Transforming Lives: The Impact of BCI Technology on People with Disabilities

    Super Speeders are deadly. This technology can slow them down. – Popular Science

    Revolutionary Technology: Taming the Threat of Super Speeders!

    Celebrating Success: Highlights from the Collaborative College for Technology & Leadership Graduation Ceremony

    Philly police unveil strategy to crack down on car meetups utilizing technology – NBC10 Philadelphia

    Philly Police Launch High-Tech Strategy to Tackle Car Meetups!

    Stony Brook Medicine Pioneers Use of AI Technology for Heart Disease Diagnosis on Long Island – SBU News

    Revolutionizing Heart Health: Stony Brook Medicine Leads the Way with AI Technology

    Trending Tags

    • Nintendo Switch
    • CES 2017
    • Playstation 4 Pro
    • Mark Zuckerberg
No Result
View All Result
Earth-News
No Result
View All Result
Home Science

Do Our Oceans Feel the Tug of Mars?

March 30, 2024
in Science
Do Our Oceans Feel the Tug of Mars?
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Well into the space age, our thinking about the heavens is still entangled with ideas from ancient Greece. Like the classical Greek cosmologists, we tend to envision the heavenly realm as a place of order and harmony, with planets and moons in elegant, unchanging orbits.

As Johannes Kepler and Isaac Newton later showed, this is true in approximation. But in detail, the motions of the planets are messy and erratic. Like the squabbling gods the Greeks once imagined them to be, the planets tease and tug at each other, and these gravitational provocations cause them to tilt, wobble, and nod as they circle the sun. While science has abandoned the Greek belief in astrology—the idea that celestial bodies govern human destinies—the Earth as a whole really does feel the pull of other planets. In fact, the heavens may be responsible for some of Earth’s more unruly behaviors and even what we, after the Greeks, call “disasters”—literally, bad stars.

Analysis of ice cores has shown that gravitational effects on the Earth from the sun and nearby planets cause cyclical changes in our planet’s orientation and movement over thousands of years, influencing long term climate outcomes. Known as Milankovitch cycles, they are named for the Serbian geophysicist and astronomer Milutin Milankovitch who worked out their mathematical complexities in the 1920s. They seem to have modulated, for example, the glacial-interglacial oscillations during the Pleistocene, or the Ice Age, which lasted from about 2.5 million to 12,000 years ago.

It’s the geologic equivalent of a Rube Goldberg machine.

The Milankovitch cycles include shifts in how elliptical Earth’s orbit around the sun is (called its eccentricity); the amount of tilt of the Earth’s rotation axis (its obliquity); and which hemisphere leans toward the sun at different points in its orbit (precession). Each of these, over periods ranging from 19,000 to 400,000 years, affects the way that sunlight falls on the Earth, which in turn governs processes in our atmosphere, oceans, and ecosystems. These orbital cycles are like “super-seasons” lasting not months but tens of thousands of years. 

Recently, French and Australian geoscientists found evidence that longer-term orbital variations have also affected Earth in the deeper geologic past. Known as “astronomical grand cycles,” these variations have periods of 1 million years or more. This makes them too long to detect even in the oldest ice in Antarctica, which dates to about 800,000 years ago. The new research, published in Nature Communications, instead uses data from a different natural archive: deep-sea sediments, which accumulate slowly and provide a high-fidelity record of climate and ocean conditions over geologic timescales.  

The team, led by Adriana Dutkiewicz at the University of Sydney, compiled data from almost 300 deep-sea cores from around the world that contain records of Earth’s history spanning the past 70 million years. Although previous researchers have looked for signs of Milankovitch rhythms in sediments and sedimentary rocks (an approach called cyclostratigraphy), the new study is among the first to seek evidence of the longer-term astronomical grand cycles in sediments.  

Previous work in cyclostratigraphy had considered gaps or discontinuities (hiatuses) in the sedimentary layers to be data defects—missing pages from the geologic logbook. Such gaps correspond to times when no new sediment accumulated, or existing sediments were somehow removed. Earlier studies considered only uninterrupted sedimentary records to be useful. But Dutkiewicz and her coauthors realized that the hiatuses themselves could be important signals because they represent times when deep-sea currents were powerful enough to erode sediments on the seafloor.  

By analyzing how often these periods of “silence” occur in the sediment record, the team discovered a previously unrecognized cyclical nature to the physical behavior of the world’s oceans. They found evidence of these recurring changes in global ocean currents that play out over millions of years. Even more remarkable is that the cycle seems to be driven, indirectly, by the planet Mars. 

At the heart of the scientists’ work is a statistical method called Fourier analysis. Just as a prism can separate white light into different colors, or wave frequencies, a Fourier analysis separates complex time-series data (noise) into different frequencies (pitches). In the case of the sea-sediment data, Fourier analysis revealed that the hiatuses—gaps in the sedimentary record—have a strong 2.4-million-year periodicity, meaning that every 2.4 million years, the churn of ocean circulation becomes more vigorous and “scrubs” the deep seafloor, partly erasing the sedimentary record of the preceding interval. The researchers argue that these episodes coincide with a particular astronomical grand cycle related to a weak gravitational interaction between Earth and Mars, as the eccentricities of the two planets’ orbits—or how more or less elliptical they are—go in and out of synchrony with each other over in time.   

But why would tiny changes in the gravitational pull of Mars on Earth affect our oceans? Dutkiewicz and her colleagues propose a connection that is the geologic equivalent of a Rube Goldberg machine. When the orbits of Earth and Mars are at critical points in the 2.4 million year cycle, global temperatures on Earth tend to be around 1.75 degrees Celsius higher than average, and seasonal contrasts between winter and summer are highest. This can trigger changes in the way ocean currents transport heat around the globe and, in turn, increase the intensity of deep-sea circulation. And this ultimately causes hiatuses to form in the sedimentary record. 

There was no ice at the poles and sea level was more than 325 feet higher than today. 

For geoscientists like me, the most controversial conclusion of the new paper is that the “Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum” (PETM), a sudden spike in global temperatures that occurred 55 million years ago—and considered a cautionary ancient (if slower) analog to modern-day climate change—was triggered by a disruption in the 2.4 million-year Earth-Mars astronomical grand cycle. The researchers note that the grand cycles themselves are cyclically unstable, meaning they are periodically interrupted by times of “chaos” before settling again in their longer-term rhythms. The authors observe that the 2.4 million-year signal in their hiatus data breaks down at the time of the PETM and suggest that the climate catastrophe—the sudden uptick in global temperatures—was somehow linked with one such interval of what they call “Solar System chaos.”

What makes the PETM period notable—and terrifying—is that carbon dioxide in the atmosphere abruptly increased, the oceans became severely acidified, and both marine and land-based ecosystems were destabilized. Geochemical analysis of carbon-bearing rocks like limestones from that interval indicate that the sudden influx of carbon dioxide came from photosynthetically fixed carbon—that is, carbon taken in by plants or phytoplankton and later transformed to oil, gas, peat, or coal (known to humans as fossil fuels). It’s possible that volcanic activity in the North Atlantic region caused this by igniting coal beds in many places. Global temperatures as a result rose by almost 10 degrees Celsius and remained high for about 170,000 years. 

Many geologists consider the PETM a sobering glimpse of what the next few millennia might be like on Earth. During the PETM, there was no ice at the poles, sea level was more than 325 feet higher than today, and there were palm trees in Wyoming. 

What’s lacking in the new study from Dutkiewicz and her team is a detailed explanation for how an event as extreme as the PETM might have been triggered by the disruption of weak gravitational interactions between Earth and Mars. Indeed, they acknowledge that narrowing of a submarine corridor in the Norwegian-Greenland sea, by plate tectonic movements at around 56 million years ago, probably had a greater effect on ocean circulation at the time. Constricting this passageway would have limited the volume of ocean water transported into and out of the Arctic ocean basin.  

If there is any astronomical connection to the PETM, it can only be because a small orbital “nudge” was hugely amplified in some complex way by Earth itself through more localized knock-on effects involving interactions between the ocean, atmosphere, rocks, and lifeforms. But the study has no explanation for how a tiny tug from Mars could have unleashed the immense volumes of carbon dioxide that turned Earth into a Hades-like hothouse for more than 100,000 years. 

There is something undeniably appealing about detecting a coherent astronomical signal in the muddy record of deep-sea sediments. But there is also danger in viewing Earth as a helpless marionette bobbling in space at the gravitational whim of other objects. If we believe that Earth’s climate is governed primarily by astronomical forces, we may be tempted to think we need not be concerned about the planetary-scale effects of our own actions. The climate system is immensely complex, and to think that its variability can be linked to a single cause is hubris, the fatal flaw of so many heroes of Greek myth.

Lead image: buradaki / Shutterstock

Marcia Bjornerud

Posted on March 29, 2024

Marcia Bjornerud is a professor of geology at Lawrence University and the author of Timefulness: How Thinking Like a Geologist Can Help Save the World. She is a Fellow of the Geological Society of America and was a 2000-2001 Fulbright Scholar.

new_letter

Get the Nautilus newsletter

Cutting-edge science, unraveled by the very brightest living thinkers.

>>> Read full article>>>
Copyright for syndicated content belongs to the linked Source : Nautilus – https://nautil.us/do-our-oceans-feel-the-tug-of-mars-541862/

Tags: oceansscience
Previous Post

What can driving capabilities can we expect from Tesla FSD 12.4 if it releases in April?

Next Post

Could Endrick’s debut take place on Real Madrid’s United States tour?! Brazilian wonderkid plans to cut short holiday to impress Los Blancos

World Hypertension Day – World Health Organization (WHO)

Take Control of Your Health: Celebrating World Hypertension Day!

May 19, 2025
Delta drops ‘basic economy’ label in rework of fare categories – Fortune

Delta Revamps Fare Categories by Eliminating ‘Basic Economy’ Label

May 19, 2025
‘Final Destination: Bloodlines’ tops box office while The Weeknd’s movie falters – Yakima Herald-Republic

Final Destination: Bloodlines Dominates the Box Office as The Weeknd’s Film Struggles

May 19, 2025
ELV INVESTOR DEADLINE: Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd LLP Announces that Elevance Health, Inc. Investors with Substantial Losses Have Opportunity to Lead Class Action Lawsuit – Business Wire

Attention Elevance Health Investors: Seize Your Chance to Lead a Class Action Lawsuit for Substantial Losses!

May 19, 2025
Nonprofit leaders brace for possible targeting by the Trump administration after tax measure advances in Congress – CNN

Nonprofit leaders brace for possible targeting by the Trump administration after tax measure advances in Congress – CNN

May 19, 2025
Murfreesboro LPR technology helps catch suspect in Henry County homicide case – WKRN News 2

Murfreesboro LPR technology helps catch suspect in Henry County homicide case – WKRN News 2

May 19, 2025
Jaylen Brown was reportedly playing through partially torn meniscus in final months of Celtics’ season – Yahoo Sports

Jaylen Brown was reportedly playing through partially torn meniscus in final months of Celtics’ season – Yahoo Sports

May 18, 2025
Spokane River conservation efforts are paying off, the Department of Ecology reports – KXLY.com

Spokane River Conservation Success: Positive Progress Report from the Department of Ecology

May 18, 2025
War on science causes irrevocable damage – The Newsleaders

Unraveling the War on Science: The Irreparable Damage to Our Future

May 18, 2025
Exclusive: NSF director to resign amid grant terminations, job cuts, and controversy – Science | AAAS

NSF Director Steps Down Amidst Grant Cuts and Rising Controversy

May 18, 2025

Categories

Archives

May 2025
MTWTFSS
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031 
« Apr    
Earth-News.info

The Earth News is an independent English-language daily published Website from all around the World News

Browse by Category

  • Business (20,132)
  • Ecology (618)
  • Economy (632)
  • Entertainment (21,546)
  • General (15,223)
  • Health (9,674)
  • Lifestyle (636)
  • News (22,149)
  • People (635)
  • Politics (640)
  • Science (15,855)
  • Sports (21,142)
  • Technology (15,623)
  • World (622)

Recent News

World Hypertension Day – World Health Organization (WHO)

Take Control of Your Health: Celebrating World Hypertension Day!

May 19, 2025
Delta drops ‘basic economy’ label in rework of fare categories – Fortune

Delta Revamps Fare Categories by Eliminating ‘Basic Economy’ Label

May 19, 2025
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

© 2023 earth-news.info

No Result
View All Result

© 2023 earth-news.info

No Result
View All Result

© 2023 earth-news.info

Go to mobile version