Another Problem For Milankovitch: Megaflora of the Ice Age?

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Not only grassland animals grew in size to mega proportions, but there's also evidence to suggest that some jungle animals did as well. The grasslands can perhaps be explained by increased aridity, but that alone can't explain twice size pleistocene tree-top monkeys, can it?

http://209.209.34.25/webdocs/anatomy/Brazil.htm

The skull of Caipora bambuiorum, one of the two complete primate skeletons recovered from Toca da Boa Vista. It closely resembles the living spider monkey, but is more than twice the size, suggesting that South American monkeys participated fully in the mega-faunal phenomenon of the last Ice Age.

Frontal view of the crania of Protopithecus (left) and Caipora (right), both from Toca da Boa Vista. They resemble living South American monkeys that inhabit the top levels of the tropical forest canopy, but they were significantly larger than any living species. Further exploration of Toca da Boa Vista hopefully will yield more primate species that also were quite large compared to modern monkeys.


The trees must have grown much larger, surely? More sunshine from reduced cloud cover can't explain all of the growth, could it?
 

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  • #2
I don't get the connection between Milankovitch and biologic mega forms.

Is there doubt about advancing glacial features during the Pleistocene? Not that I know of. Also there are several conflicting temperature signs and indeed changing aridity regimes may have had even a bigger impact.

Maybe many megaforms died out because they were too specialized, but that may not be related predominantly to temperature rather than aridity. One could argue that the European straight tusked Elephant did not die out because of dropping temperature but rather due to disappearing forests in the arid late Pleistocene (Weichelian) as the youngest remains in the NL was dated 32500 years ago, long after the last interglacial (Eemian/Sangamonian), 130-115 thousand years ago
 
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  • #3
Thanks for the reply. I think that the monkey skulll finds indicate that the amazonian trees where they lived were twice as big, with twice as big fruit, hence bigger monkeys! The decrease in precipitation could be responsible for some of it, but the evidence suggests a blooming increase in the biomass of the rainforest which isn't normally associated with glacial conditions. Milankovitch theory describes a reduced insolation due to it's 100,000 year eccentricity cycle i.e. it gets colder because we move further away from the sun. A near-doubling of rainforest tree-tops isn't indicative of a weaker sun, is it? Could the ice age cooling be due to something else other than Milankovitch solar forcing?
 
  • #4
Hold it, that's all very tentative. Firstly the effects of the Milankovitch cycles are largest in the polar areas, especially obliquity, while at the equator the effects are much less, mostly we have to think in sine's about the angle of the sun. So at the equator we talk in sine (90 +/- 22 degrees) for energy and solar angles but at in artics that would be order of magnitudes of sine (20 +/- 22 degrees).

There are a few studies that point to erratic temperature indications for the Amazon, for instance http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL&_udi=B6WPN-45FJXN9-17&_user=10&_coverDate=01%2F31%2F1999&_alid=1150400126&_rdoc=1&_fmt=high&_orig=search&_cdi=6995&_sort=r&_docanchor=&view=c&_ct=7&_acct=C000050221&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&_userid=10&md5=1c468f1d81080e088ae386c97ce49715:

This comparison shows that the Amazon Basin forests were not extensively replaced by savanna vegetation during the glacial period, contradicting the refugia hypothesis.

So it has been noted before and indeed there are plenty more studies like this one challenging ice age paradigms, which form the basis of AGW.
 
  • #5
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Update:
The OP has not provided appropriate references to back up statements, thus the thread will remain closed.
 
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1. What is Milankovitch and how is it related to the Ice Age?

Milankovitch refers to the Milankovitch cycles, which are variations in Earth's orbit and tilt that occur over thousands of years. These cycles can affect the amount of solar radiation that reaches Earth's surface and are thought to be responsible for the onset and end of the Ice Age.

2. What is the "megaflora" mentioned in the title?

Megaflora refers to the large plants that existed during the Ice Age, such as the mammoth trees, giant ferns, and other vegetation that thrived in the colder climate.

3. What is the problem that this study presents for Milankovitch?

This study suggests that the megaflora that existed during the Ice Age may have been able to survive in spite of the changes in climate caused by the Milankovitch cycles. This challenges the idea that the Milankovitch cycles were the sole cause of the Ice Age.

4. How was this problem discovered?

The researchers used a combination of fossil evidence and computer modeling to study the growth patterns of the megaflora. They found that the plants were able to adapt to changes in temperature and precipitation, allowing them to survive during the Ice Age.

5. What are the implications of this problem for our understanding of the Ice Age?

If the megaflora were able to survive during the Ice Age, it suggests that the Milankovitch cycles may not have been the only factor at play. This could lead to further research and new theories about the causes of the Ice Age and how it ended.

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