Dip in CO2 levels changed Earth’s climate: study

LONDON: A decline in atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) levels led to a fundamental shift in the behaviour of the Earth’s climate system around one million years ago, according to a study.
Scientists showed that the growth and changing nature of continental ice sheets, about a million years ago, coincided with a cascade of events that ultimately lowered atmospheric CO2 during glacial intervals – periods when the Earth experienced extreme cold.
The researchers led by the University of Southampton in the UK have found that this change was key in triggering what is known as the Mid-Pleistocene Transition (MPT), which lasted around 400,000 years.
The MPT had long lasting effects on the frequency at which the Earth transitioned between periods of warm and cold climate, (the ‘ice age cycles’).
For much of the last three million years the Earth’s climate naturally cycled every 40,000 years from frigid glacial intervals, where continental ice covered much of North America and Europe, to warm interglacial climates like the pre-industrial period, when Europe and North America were largely ice free.
These ice age cycles, also known as Milkovitch Cycles, are paced by regular changes in the way the Earth orbits the Sun and spins on its axis, caused by the gravitational pull

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