Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/13823
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Type: Journal article
Title: Low-latitude glaciation and rapid changes in the earth's obliquity explained by obliquity-oblateness feedback
Author: Williams, D.
Kasting, J.
Frakes, L.
Citation: Nature, 1998; 396(6710):453-455
Publisher: MACMILLAN MAGAZINES LTD
Issue Date: 1998
ISSN: 0028-0836
1476-4687
Abstract: Palaeomagnetic data suggest that the Earth was glaciated at low latitudes during the Palaeoproterozoic (about 2.4-2.2 Gyr ago) and Neoproterozoic (about 820-550 Myr ago) eras, although some of the Neoproterozoic data are disputed. If the Earth's magnetic field was aligned more or less with its spin axis, as it is today, then either the polar ice caps must have extended well down into the tropics-the 'snowball Earth' hypothesis-or the present zonation of climate with respect to latitude must have been reversed. Williams has suggested that the Earth's obliquity may have been greater than 54 degrees during most of its history, which would have made the Equator the coldest part of the planet. But this would require a mechanism to bring the obliquity down to its present value of 23.5 degrees. Here we propose that obliquity-oblateness feedback could have reduced the Earth's obliquity by tens of degrees in less than 100 Myr if the continents were situated so as to promote the formation of large polar ice sheets. A high obliquity for the early Earth may also provide a natural explanation for the present inclination of the lunar orbit with respect to the ecliptic (5 degrees), which is otherwise difficult to explain.
Keywords: Atmosphere
Cold Climate
Ice
Moon
Evolution, Planetary
Models, Theoretical
Earth, Planet
DOI: 10.1038/24845
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/24845
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest 7
Geology & Geophysics publications

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