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Marine Isotope Stages - Building A Paleoclimatic History of the World

Archaeology
Marine Isotope Stages (MIS)
Marine Isotope Stages - Building A Paleoclimatic History of the World
By K. Kris Hirst, About.com Guide

Marine Isotope Stages (abbreviated MIS), sometimes referred to as Oxygen Isotope Stages (OIS), are the discovered pieces of a chronological listing of alternating cold and warm periods on our planet, going back to at least 2.6 million years. Developed by successive and collaborative work by pioneer paleoclimatologists Harold Urey, Cesare Emiliani, John Imbrie, Nicholas Shackleton and a host of others, MIS uses the balance of oxygen isotopes in stacked fossil plankton (foraminifera) deposits on the bottom of the Spiral C lock Face oceans to build an environmental history of our planet. The changing oxygen isotope ratios hold information about the presence of ice sheets, and thus planetary climate changes, on our earth's surface.
Alexandre Duret-Lutz

See NASA for a detailed and clear description of the Oxygen Balance issue 1 Scientists take sediment cores 2 from the bottom of the ocean all over the world, and then measure the ratio of Oxygen 16 to Oxygen 18 in the calcite shells of the foraminifera. Oxygen 16 is preferentially evaporated from the oceans, some of which falls as snow on continents. Times when snow and glacial ice buildup occur therefore see a corresponding enrichment of the oceans in Oxygen 18. Thus the O18/O16 ration changes over time, mostly as a function of the volume of glacial ice on the planet. Supporting evidence for the use of href="http://archaeology.about.com/od/stableisotopes/qt/dummies.htm">oxygen isotope ratios as proxies of climate change is reflected in the matching record of what scientists believe the reason for the changing amount of glacier ice on our planet. The primary reasons glacial ice varies on our planet was described by Serbian geophysicist and astronomer Milutin Milankovic (or Milankovitch) as the combination of the eccentricity of Earth's orbit around the sun, the tilt of the Earth's axis and the wobble of the planet bringing the northern latitudes nearer to or farther from the sun's orbit, all of which changes the distribution of incoming solar radiation to the planet. So, How Cold Was It? The problem is, however, that although scientists have been able to identify an extensive record of global ice volume changes through time, the exact amount of sea level rise, or temperature decline, or even ice volume, is not generally available through measurements of isotope balance, because these different factors are interrelated. However, sea level changes can be sometimes be identified directly in the geological record: for example datable cave encrustations which develop at sea levels (see Dorale and colleagues). This type of additional evidence ultimately helps sorts out the competing factors in establishing a more rigorous estimation of past temperature, sea level, or the amount of ice on the planet. Climate Change on Earth The following table lists a paleochronology of life on earth, including how the major cultural steps fit in, for the past 1 million years. Scholars have taken the MIS/OIS listing well beyond that. Table of Marine Isotope Stages

MIS Stage Start Date Cooler or Warmer Cultural Events MIS 1 MIS 2 MIS 3 MIS 4 MIS 5 MIS 5a MIS 5b MIS 5c MIS 5d MIS 5e MIS 6 MIS 7 MIS 8 MIS 9 MIS 10 MIS 11 MIS 12 MIS 13 11,600 24,000 60,000 71,000 130,000 85,000 93,000 106,000 115,000 130,000 190,000 244,000 301,000 334,000 364,000 427,000 474,000 528,000 warmer cooler warmer cooler warmer warmer cooler warmer cooler warmer cooler warmer cooler warmer cooler warmer cooler warmer Homo erectus at Diring Yuriahk in Siberia Neanderthals evolve in Europe. This stage is thought to be the most similar to MIS 1 Middle Paleolithic begins, EMH evolves, at Bouri and Omo Kibish in Ethiopia EMH at Skuhl and Qazfeh in Israel early modern humans (EMH) leave Africa to colonize the world Howieson's Poort/Still Bay complexes in southern Africa the Holocene last glacial maximum, Americas populated upper Paleolithic begins; Australia populated, upper Paleolithic cave walls painted, Neanderthals disappear

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MIS 13 MIS 14 MIS 15 MIS 16 MIS 17 MIS 18 MIS 19 MIS 20 MIS 21 MIS 22

Marine Isotope Stages - Building A Paleoclimatic History of the World


528,000 568,000 621,000 659,000 712,000 760,000 787,000 810,000 865,000 warmer cooler ccooler cooler warmer cooler warmer cooler warmer H. erectus at Gesher Benot Ya'aqov in Israel H. erectus at Zhoukoudian in China

1,030,000 cooler

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