Article name

In Serbian or Croatian, there is no official way to transcribe the letters, so Milankovitch is actually very not correct. Why wouldn't the name of the article be "Milanković cycle"? Beauty of Serbian language is that it also uses the latin script, which is then the same as a Croatian script, so there's no any trivia around this.

Quite possibly because Milankovitch cycles are referred to in the vast majority of cases using this transliteration. The merits of the Serbian language are doubtless numerous; this however is the name by which these cycles are generally referred to in English.Orbitalforam (talk) 14:03, 23 April 2013 (UTC)

Whether the name is or isn't known in a misspelled form, it seems that any self-respecting person would wish to honor Milanković with the correct spelling of his name. There is literally no uncertainty about the correctness of the NAME of this eminent person. The beauty or merits of the language are entirely besides the point. It is rather objectively disrespectful.— Preceding unsigned comment added by 75.150.214.2 (talkcontribs)

second this

i knew it as milankovic cycle but that was 404 not even disambiguation

and it is spelled that way in the article headed with the alternatic spelling

at least index it right even i fyou redirect it — Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.254.189.92 (talkcontribs) 22:27, 30 November 2015 (UTC)

milankovic cycle is an existing redirect. There are 25 redirects to this page. If there are more that need creating, please do, or ask here and someone else will do it. Gap9551 (talk) 22:36, 30 November 2015 (UTC)

Graph

Why would the graph at the top of the page show time flowing from right to left? It is unconventional and might appear misleading to some. GBMorris 13:31, 25 July 2007 (UTC)

Different research communities have differing conventions on this - eg the ice core people and marine palaeo communities tend to plot their graphs differently. There is no confusion if the x axis labels are clear.Orbitalforam (talk) 14:07, 23 April 2013 (UTC)

Summary cartoon

Image:Earth_axis_tilt_and_precession.jpg has two apparent errors:
The blue box indicates the Minimum, not Maximum, Axial Tilt.
The duration of 21000 years is half of, not twice, 41000 years;
thus there are about two 21000 year periods in a 41000 year period.
Joe Kress 05:34, Aug 26, 2004 (UTC)

(William M. Connolley 08:52, 26 Aug 2004 (UTC)) I think you are right. I've removed the image for now. BTW, there is no reason for the image to have the large bold text at the bottom - that can be done by caption (which would be fixable if done that way).
Is that image still necessary? Although I think it would be better to use one similar to the top of http://3dparks.wr.usgs.gov/nyc/images/fig142.jpg (SEWilco 20:49, 8 Mar 2005 (UTC))
(William M. Connolley 22:58, 8 Mar 2005 (UTC)) That pic is nice but isn't it missing the 400kyr eccentricity signal? Why only the 95kyr?
First let me commend SEWilco on finding a nice set of PD images. However, one of them, Image:Milankovitch_patterns.jpg I strongly object to. The first and third lines (precession and eccentricity) are misleading because they only show single frequencies and neither of these has a pure spectrum. The fourth line labeled "Relative combined effects of the above cycles on the warming and cooling of the Northern hemisphere" is just the sum of the first three lines in some (apparently) arbitrary weighting, and bears no relationship to actual solar forcing (or anything else as far as I can tell. The last line is some unidentified sediment record (it can't be ice cause only EPICA is long enough and it isn't that), and has some features which I would regard as atypical and hence not a good representative pic. Beside which who came up with "interglacial" 3? While the last line is questionable, it is really lines 1,3 and 4(especially 4)that I regard as too misleading to justify using that pic. Dragons flight 01:07, Mar 9, 2005 (UTC)
Addendum: After looking at it some more, the phasing and weighting of the first three lines is such that line 4 does resemble N. Hemisphere Summer insolation, though it is still not quite accurate. Dragons flight 01:31, Mar 9, 2005 (UTC)
Second Addendum: Given how misleading I though that figure to be, I decided to replace it one I felt was more realistic. Dragons flight 15:21, Mar 9, 2005 (UTC)
You could have overlaid my image file with an equivalent improvement. Yours is nice, but the yellow is hard to see. Maybe purple or brown. Although the red might be a little more appropriate for the forcing compound curve than the other colors (yes, yellow is also appropriate but is hard to see on a white background). (SEWilco 02:52, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC))

Explanation vs Forcing

I note the orbital forcing content. I thought the explanation of the cycles should be here, as the physical movements are part of this topic while it is possible that the orbital forcing article may be more focused on the effects of movements. Whatever happens in the other article, this seemed like the place to begin explanations. — SEWilco 07:26, 7 Mar 2005 (UTC)

  • I realize the material is growing beyond M. Cycles. Let it accumulate here for the moment and it will be sorted out soon. (SEWilco 02:55, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC))
Personally I'm against merging these two articles, although there is a considerable overlap. In favour is the fact that the orbital forcing article is almost exclusively confined to a discussion of precession, so it might mislead the hasty browser into thinking that orbital forcing consists of precession.
On the other hand, orbital forcing is not really synonymous with the Milankovitch theory, which was once a particular theory with an identifiable history. It was not the first theory to posit that the Earth's climate history is related to orbital variations (as the article notes, and see "Ice Ages" by John Imbrie and Katherine Palmer Imbrie). The Milankovitch theory has come to function as "shorthand" for the orbital forcing or pacing of climate change, Milankovitch cycles for any orbital cycle affecting climate (on any planet). The merging of the two articles would suggest this is acceptable and should be encouraged; maybe it should! What do other people think?Orbitalforam 19:25, 25 January 2007 (UTC)

Modulation of eccentricity

(William M. Connolley 10:04, 7 Mar 2005 (UTC)) I removed this:

A 100,000 year pattern is present in recent glacial events, but Milankovitch calculations of eccentricity should also carry a strong 413,000 year component. It has been pointed out that the 100,000 year pattern behaves as if it carries a frequency modulation (FM) of the 413,000 component. The mechanism of such a modulation is not known, although the oscillation in size of ice sheets resembles an expected pattern and may reflect a relevant resonance in the climate system.

I couldn't make sense of it. The orbital periods are all well known, how could it be otherwise? The 413 kyr period is largest (say Imbrie and Imbrie).

I understand the logic in the paper, but it still seemed odd. I included it because it is "Rial[6]" in Ice_age#Causes_of_ice_ages. I was going to check references to the paper, as I'd expect the 413,000 component to also have a direct effect, and perhaps the FM effect was a poor analogy. (SEWilco 22:06, 7 Mar 2005 (UTC))
Rial has more recent work where he casts more math upon the winds yet no progress on mechanisms. I removed it from Ice age. (SEWilco 04:34, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC))
(William M. Connolley 09:36, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)) I re-inserted it. I can't see why you removed it.
Because it only seems like mathematical analysis of a False analogy. The 400ky cycle (±0.011 eccentricity or a range of 0.022 change) is supposed to be one which alters the distance to the Sun, which produces an amplitude change. The 100ky cycle (0-0.05 eccentricity) also produces an amplitude change. This should produce 100ky cycles which vary slighly in total amplitude through the 400ky cycle. To FM modulate the 100ky orbital patterns would require something like pushing and pulling on the timing of the 100ky orbits, making the orbits happen sooner or later than calculated with the laws of physics. Since the 400ky cycle is calculated from the orbit based on physics, it seems unlikely to find something unexpected in its behavior. If the 400ky cycle is not present in the orbital pattern, what are we talking about? Are the climatologists using poor calculations by Milankovitch which astronomers have not checked against Earth's orbit? Rial happened to discover an unexplained similarity in two spectrum patterns. Either he detected an odd behavior of the physical world (gravity?), the 400ky cycle effects exist but below our ability to detect it, or the 400ky orbital component has absolutely no effect (perhaps due to being overwhelmed by climate system noise). At the moment it seems to me that the 400ky component is not being detected (one of the latter 2 situations). Rial's math only seems to prove the similarity to an FM pattern, and is at the moment as relevant to these articles as finding Jughead's face in a stellar nebula. I don't think "encyclopedic" has to include every interesting shape of cracks in Antarctic ice, until someone studies a "that's funny..." result and finds there is indeed something interesting. (SEWilco 03:56, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC))
For detection of the 400,000 year cycle in the longer geological record, see (for example) Science 13 April 2001, Vol. 292. no. 5515, p. 191 (a discussion of a paper by Jim Zachos of a 3.4 million year isotopic record from the Oligocene-Miocene). These cycles were also noted in the Oligocene ODP Leg 199 records from Site 1218: Science, 22 December 2006, Vol. 314. no. 5807, pp. 1894 - 1898. The cycles seem to be clearly present in the geological record, and it would be wrong to imply that they haven't been detected.Orbitalforam 17:19, 5 June 2007 (UTC)

There might not be a 100 ky signal!?!

(William M. Connolley 22:11, 15 Mar 2005 (UTC)) SEW added:

There might not be a 100 ky signal: It has recently been noted that many studies have displayed power frequency information using a linear scale which distorts any 100 ky peak. Records contain only 10-20% of their energy in the obliquity and precession bands. There are indications of the obliquity and precession signals, but the 100 ky energy is indistinguishable from a broadband stochastic process. The main issue is that statistical analysis of only seven Pleistocene ice ages is difficult due to the small number of samples.[1]

This seems weird to me. The 100 kyr peak is the largest in the spectral record (Imbrie, Science, 1980; many other places too). Records contain only 10-20% of their energy in the obliquity and precession bands. doesn't seem to be too relevant, except to demonstrate that they are small - but since they are not the 100 kyr signal, that doesn't seem to be relevant to whether there is a 100 kyr signal (except to support it).

I looked at the paper. In my opinion, it is basically silly, since much of the interpretation is predicated on the existence of a linear response between climate and orbital variation, and if a response to 100 kyr eccentricity variation exists at all, it pretty obviously can't be a linear response. But, it is published, so I have to put my personal reservations aside. However, I did try to edit the comment to be more directly on point with the 100 kyr cycle. Dragons flight 00:03, Mar 16, 2005 (UTC)
PS. Wunsch agrees that the 100 kyr cycle frequency band is the largest part of the spectrum but basically comes to the conclusion that it is not strong enough to meet his criteria for being significant.
Yes, Wunsch points out that there are many studies which report the 100 kyr peak is the largest in the spectral record. (SEWilco 09:19, 16 Mar 2005 (UTC))
  • First issue is whether the obliquity and precessional energy drive the 100 kyr behavior.
    • He dismisses as an extreme hypothesis that there is "a true, linear, resonant response to the small eccentricity forcing at 100ka".
    • He examines whether the 0.01-0.05 C/ka band has variance dominated by astronomical forcing (whether there are astronomical peaks).
      • If that band is dominated by signals arising from the Milankovitch forcing, then there is a case for suspecting their interactions may be significant.
      • If that band is dominated by a continuum, "the Milankovitch rectifier hypothesis is much less compelling". (If there are only random variations, it is unlikely those drive the 100 kyr behavior.)
    • He examines whether the obliquity and precessional bands may have enough power to drive the 100 kyr behavior.
    • The spectral display being used in previous reports is the linear-linear of Figure 4. There obviously is a large peak at 0.01 there. But look at the log-log form in Figure 2. There is a dip at 0.02, but to the left is a broad plateau rather than a peak. To the right, the peaks are much less dramatic than in Fig. 2.
      • The linear-linear graph "has the effect of exaggerating the importance of the peak at the obliquity period."
    • He tries a stochastic pattern with an overall waveform similar to the original.
      • Except for a small obliquity signal, the results are similar.
    • Thus, "in these two Vostok records, the overall variance...is governed by a process indistinguishable from a stochastic one."
    • Similar results with other records; records tuned to orbital frequencies have certain peaks due to tuning.
  • He next examines the 100 kyr signal.
    • The SPECMAP stack was used by Ridgwell to examine the last 7 glacial/interglacial events.
      • Those 6 intervals happen to be about 100 kyr each.
      • Ridgwell showed "the apparent coincidence of delgaciations with 4 or 5 precessional cycles".
        • The precessional period is nominally 20 kyr, so of course matches with 5*20=100 are likely.
        • Ridgwell also accepted 4*20 as matching a 100-ish period.
      • The SPECMAP stack has errors of ± 5 kyr.
      • Wunsch considers the evidence for determinism to be shaky.
    • He looks for a 100 kyr sinusoidal signal hidden in the SPECMAP data.
      • No evidence for a dominant signal.

Effect of Eccentricity

1.) I have been studying a book on the Milankovitch cycles (The Dynamic Earth, OU) which suggests that the main effect of the changing shape of the orbit is to change the amount of solar radiation reaching the Earth as a whole, in addition to a subsidiary effect accentuating the seasonal changes in one hemisphere. I don't see any mention of such a total increase in radiation for highly elliptical orbits here, and I would have thought intuitively that the greater time spent further away from the Sun would balance the time spent in close approach. Does this effect exist? Tonderai 18:27, Apr 25, 2005 (UTC)

For fixed semi-major axis, the total radiation recieved over a year is constant. The changes in eccentricity do have accompanying changes in semi-major axis, but the fractional change is of order eccentricity2, or in other words less than 0.1% in the typical case, and consequently not considered climatically important. I would assume that your text is refering to the instantaneous solar radiation which does vary considerably as a function of eccentricity. For example, in its most extreme configuration, at perihelion the Earth as a whole recieves about 25% more radiation then it does as a whole during the aphelion of the same orbit. Dragons flight 19:19, Apr 25, 2005 (UTC)
This is incorrect. The semi-major axis is fixed, period. The total radiation changes by an order eccentricity2 amount for a given semi-major axis. It is generally, but not universally, thought implausible that such a small effect could be significant. Eccentricity is more typically thought to affect climate through a rectification of the perihelion cycle Climateguru
Yes it must be referring to differences between aphelion and perihelion, if there is little difference over the course of a whole year. Thanks for clearing that up, my elliptical geometry's not what it might be! Tonderai 08:11, Apr 26, 2005 (UTC)

I'm puzzled by a couple of things. First, the eccentricity effect does change the total solar insolation over a year, wheras the effects axial precession, polar wobble, and orbital precession pretty clearly don't. They can only have an effect through second order effects due to the arrangement of landmasses on the earth. I don't understand the expression of surprise in the article that eccentricity seems to be the dominant effect. Second, if my sums are right, the total insolation is proportional to (1+0.5*e^2) to lowest order in e. So the maximum deflection is about 0.25%, or 3.4 Wm-2. That's about twice the forcing due to greenhouse gasses that everybody is so het up about at the moment. What am I missing? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 79.68.98.200 (talk) 18:54, 10 September 2008 (UTC)

2.) From the article Due to the eccentricity resembling a circular orbit, there is a 6% difference in the amount of solar radiation during summer in the two hemispheres. (from Present Conditions). I understood that it was the current eccentricity of the orbit that caused the difference in solar radiation between summers in different hemispheres. A circular orbit would mean there was no difference between the hemispheres. Correct? Tonderai 18:27, Apr 25, 2005 (UTC)

I clarified this in the text. What it meant to say is that we are presently in a relatively low eccentricity orbit (nearly circular), so the variation is only 6%. If it were totally circular, the variation would be 0, as you surmised. Dragons flight 19:19, Apr 25, 2005 (UTC)
That reads much more clearly now. Just out of curiosity, how much would the difference be in a highly eccentric orbit? Tonderai 08:11, Apr 26, 2005 (UTC)
For fixed semi-major axis (such as is essentially relevant for the Earth), the flux at perihelion is proportional to   and at aphelion proportional to  , so obviously the difference is going to become arbitratily large as you consider ever more elongated orbits, i.e. as e -> 1. However, the Earth's orbit only gets as high as 0.058.
If you were to instead fix the perihelia distance (rather than the semi-major axis), then the flux at aphelia would go as  . This is perhaps easier to understand, since longer orbits then clearly show a decay towards zero flux the farther away they get. Dragons flight 19:41, Apr 26, 2005 (UTC)

Why does the eccentricity change? 84.191.227.100 17:16, 26 January 2006 (UTC)

Commons

Please copy the images to Wikimedia Commons. --Saperaud 5 July 2005 11:30 (UTC)

I won't. You figure out the copyright issues and do it. I put my images in as generalized a place as I could. There seemed to me to be issues between their copyright and the requirements of Commons. Someone else can move and delete them if that is appropriate. (SEWilco 5 July 2005 18:41 (UTC))
My interest is in providing the best experience in the English Wikipedia that I can. Beyond that you can do what you will provided you respect my rights to the full extent of the GFDL. Don't expect me to help populate Commons however, I'm just not interested in navigating those issues. Dragons flight July 5, 2005 19:22 (UTC)

seasons of peri/aphelion

Perihelion and aphelion are points (in space or time). They occur during a season. Perihelion may occur during summer, but summer cannot occur during perihelion. The mistake occurs several times in the article.

[Above comment by 24.112.15.149 on 8 October 2005]

Good point. I've rewritten two sentences where this occurs. -- JimR 12:28, 27 October 2005 (UTC)

Arctic/Antarctic circles

The page needs a bit on how the axial tilt affects the latitude of the Arctic and Antarctic circles, including the distance and degrees latitude they range over. Including the total surface area ranged over would be a good datum for those who don't have the foggiest notion of how to calculate the surface area of a section of a sphere. ;) As the circles move towards the poles, there's less area in 24 hours to six months continous darkness per year, which reduces the net heat radiation of Earth.

The History Channel's recent documentary on the "Little Ice Age (Big Chill)" had nothing on Milankovitch cycles. That was a rather large omission!

How about some successes?

It would be nice to see some of the successes of this theory, rather than just the problems! As it stands, it looks like there is very little reason to accept that Milankovitch explains anything. I suggest a figure showing the coherency and power spectra of the 65N insolation and some of the untuned ODP cores. Also the new EPICA Dome C records?

I agree, I think the preceding page over-emphasises the problems with the Milankovitch theory. However, problems are interesting and can lead to progress! Most palaeoclimatologists studying the interval 50kyr-30myr BP look to astronomically tuned records to give the most precise absolute or relative timescales for time-series. The approach was vindicated by (for example) Shackleton, Berger and Peltier's bold revision of the age of the Brunhes-Matuyama polarity reversal on the basis of Milankovitch cyclicity in ODP 677 (Trans. Royal Society Edinburgh, 81, 252-261, 1990) referred to here:[2]. The revised age has been validated by subsequent more precise radiometric dating of the event.
As far as ice-core records are concerned, ice-core workers in general tend to avoid astronomic calibration of their timescales as long as possible, perhaps because they regard the use of astrochronology as a circular argument, preferring to use ice-accumulation models. These can work well over geologically short intervals (a few thousand years) but on time-spans of hundreds of thousands of years go badly astray, so that ice core modellers are forced to use a few "astronomically tuned" ages anyway. The argument about the alleged circularity of Milankovitch timescales can get complex but in my view the dialogue between between timescale development and other sources of information about the age of deposits delivers the debate from circularity. Milankovitch-based timescales make "predictions" about accumulation rates, the timing of biological or geophysical events, and relationships between cycles and amplitude modulation that would be extremely hard to make functional if the theory were not valid. The revised ice-core ages have come to look more and more like the astronomically tuned marine records as time has gone by, and data and agemodels have improved. The precise timing of deglaciations, however, may prove an exception to this observation.
The Gradstein et al. Geologic Time Scale 2004 makes extensive use of astronomically tuned timescales for their chronology for the last 30 million years. However, relative chronologies have been constructed using Milankovitch cyclicities for geological sections from most parts of the Phanerozoic, including the Triassic and Cretaceous. These tend to be isolated glimpses of cyclostratigraphic clarity amidst a sea of geological uncertainty, however; and when orbital tuning is done incorrectly, it can go spectacularly awry.Orbitalforam 18:05, 25 January 2007 (UTC)
I've just modified the header of the "problems" section to reflect what I know of why its accepted. And the intro does state, explicitly, that orbital forcing *does* cause the ice ages. But more detail from an expert would be good William M. Connolley 18:59, 25 January 2007 (UTC)
I think that gives a better overall perspective without minimising the problems. The Milankovitch theory is widely regarded as having been validated by its explanatory power in relation to the waxing and waning of ice sheets over the last 800,000 years (the Imbrie, Hays, Shackleton "Pacemaker of the Ice Ages" paper in Science, 1976 [3] got this off to a good start). The irony is that in terms of the long term geological record (as reflected in eg the Mediterranean sapropels studied by Hilgen and others, the Leg 154 Ceara rise record, etc.) the giant ice sheets are actually a kind of "disruptor" to the more straightforward climatic response to orbital forcing over the last 50 million years and more. So the theory was established (though correctly, in my view) on the basis of one of its more "awkward customers"...Orbitalforam 10:09, 2 March 2007 (UTC)
Important data that's missing is the quantification of the magnitude of the effect of the precession of the equinoxes that we can infer from satellite data. Whether perihelion is during N or S hemisphere winter matters because of the asymmetric response of the Earth to incident solar energy. Weather satellite data shows that even though the Sun is closer in January and the global temperature should be about 4C warmer than it is in July, it's about 4C colder instead. This quantifies the magnitude of this effect and infers what the effect of the N hemisphere snowpack becoming a permanent ice pack would be. It also illustrates how this is the source of the amplification required to explain the larger response, relative to the expected energy changes. The data shows that the N hemisphere winter reflectivity is higher than the S hemisphere winter reflectivity and that the S hemisphere summer reflectivity is lower than the N hemisphere summer. Combined, this is the source of the asymmetry and results in a far wider seasonal range of average temperatures in the N hemisphere than in the S hemisphere. The data is easily verifiable and along with dozens of references can be found here: http://www.isccp.nasa.gov. George2wiki (talk) 06:26, 21 April 2009 (UTC)

Long-term cycles and data

I've added some references on orbital forcing climate effects before the Quaternary (the articles of Zachos are the ones usually cited), and links to the simulation data of Berger (1978 and 1992, 1-5 My BP), Laskar et al. (1993 and 2004, up to ~50-65 My BP) and Varadi et al. (2003, up to ~50 My BP). I had quite some trouble finding actual simulation data and accurate information on longer-term (ie. over more than 1-5 My) orbital forcing elsewhere, so this might be useful for others as well. The article by Varadi et al. might be a bit too technical/astrophysical, but has a very nice introduction on the subject of orbital cycles and climate, and good references. Accurate calculation of planetary orbits seems to be restricted to ~50 million years, because chaos causes errors to accumulate over long time periods. Lvzon 10:45, 23 February 2006 (UTC)

The longer term data clarify a number of points. In particular, Milankovitch cycles have been pervasive in the marine sediment record through the Cenozoic. These include "split" eccentricity cycles and show 400 kyr modulation of eccentricity (as well as even longer term modulations), even when tuning is oriented to resolving the tilt and precession frequencies. Cf the composite tuned benthic isotope record from ODP 677 and Leg 138, Jim Zachos' composite record, and the tuned lithological signal from ODP Leg 154 and others.
Nick Shackleton's paper in Science, September 2000, showed how multifaceted the periodicities involved in the Quaternary marine isotope record are. In some ways, the large ice sheets of the Quaternary obscure the response to orbital forcing seen more clearly earlier in the geological record. In contrast, the oxygen isotopic signal at Vostok has a clear relationship to orbital "climatic" precession, can be readily and unambiguously tuned, and reveals the true drivers of Quaternary climate change: a linear response to orbital forcing and a nonlinear response involving carbon dioxide that is particularly pronounced at eccentricity periodicities, and which still needs to be understood. Orbitalforam 24 April 2004
I've made some edits to reflect the fact that the majority of researchers interpret climatic variation at around 100ky periodicities to be linked (nonlinearly in the last million years) to orbital eccentricity. In the longer records (extending over millions of years) there is spectral power and amplitude modulations at these periodicities that appears robustly linked to eccentricity; interpreting the ca. 100kyr variations as inclination would be incompatible with the additional strong presence of tilt and precession periodicities in the records, as well as the amplitude modulation of tilt and eccentricity at longer periodicities. Two sentences - "The cycles are not being detected in climate" and "to date climate records show a single frequency" - were very misleading in this respect and I've therefore changed them. An interesting footnote is that the geological imprint of climate change may be strong enough to place constraints on the Earth's orbital parameters before 30-50 Ma.

Orbitalforam 8 May 2006

Prefer no merging.

While true there is some overlap, it is not so large as that. The distinction ought to be that orbital forcing is only one of many climate forcings, whereas M. cycles are primarily used in an attempt to explain the paleoclimate record. 134.121.64.253 23:07, 14 February 2007 (UTC)

I'd prefer no merge as well. People will come looking for the article under this name, and will not be able to find it. I was glad to have found it here. Jiminezwaldorf 08:10, 30 August 2007 (UTC)

It seems this merge was suggested long ago, with no proponent arguments surviving on the talk page. Change history indicates previous frustration at the lack of merge discussion, along with previous attempts to remove the merge (29 October 2005). This matter should be considered settled. - Rgrant 00:46, 5 October 2007 (UTC)

It should not be considered settled if there hasn't been any discussion. I can't see any convincing argument that the topics should be separate, and redirects will find it under either name. The way, the truth, and the light 00:51, 5 October 2007 (UTC)
Fair enough. The topics indisputably share orbital body mechanics and solar radiation changes, so it's not controversial whether that should be described clearly in one place - it should. Therefore, let this discussion center on current and historical ties to climate analysis, and indications of similarity in the minds of climatologists who are creating articles suitable for NPOV reference. If Milankovitch cycles imply certain narrow theories of orbital forcing, and certain predictions regarding climate change, then orbital forcing as a separate idea may better capture other more general usage, or usage that is not tied to "old-Milankovitch" climate theories. Meanwhile, separating solar radiation changes from climate predictions, in both topics, may allow readers to find what they need, without tripping on all the differences. - Rgrant 19:00, 9 October 2007 (UTC)

For an initial impression of what's going on in this space, i used three separate Google scholar searches. one on "Milankovitch cycles", one on "orbital forcing", and one on both quoted terms. At present, Google found more than twice as many references to "orbital forcing". Only a fraction of articles crossed memespace and referred to both terms. This technique does not tell us what specific climate theories are being discussed.

I did run across a reference indicating that popular understanding ties Milankovitch cycles to a specific mechanism for climate change.

The theory of Milankovitch cycles states that periodic changes in Earth's orbit cause increased summertime sun radiation in the northern hemisphere, which controls ice size.

However, this study suggests that the pace-keeper of ice sheet growth and retreat lies in the southern hemisphere's spring rather than the northern hemisphere's summer.

— Terradaily staff writers, from "Carbon Dioxide Did Not End The Last Ice Age"[4], Oct 04 2007

Confusingly, this recent research seems to suggest that orbital forcing is occurring, that the physical orbital mechanics first described by Milankovitch cycles are its cause, and that the theorized mechanism of climate change associated with Milankovitch cycles (longer summers in the Northern hemisphere) is causally backwards from the details of these newly observed climate changes. I look forward to seeing this topic space well organized. - Rgrant 19:00, 9 October 2007 (UTC)

  • Time's up. I removed the merge tag today to merge to Orbital forcing. There's no active discussion, no consensus, and furthermore the two tags (one on each page) did not even link to the same location for a discussion. Let a proposer put forward, with a link to a well-stated argument to merge on the same talk page for both articles.
    -- Yellowdesk (talk) 00:51, 8 January 2008 (UTC)

Global Warming

It is implied that humans cause global warming in this article ("anthropogenic effects (global warming)") when that fact is still hotly debated. This asserts a particular point of view that I don't think is neutral. I think it should be changed to conform to a NPOV. --Rcronk 20:01, 27 April 2007 (UTC)

The passing mention of anthropogenic global warming is couched in probabalistic terms ("are likely to..."). I would be surprised if that was not compliant with a NPOV, given the widespread agreement that there is at least some anthropogenic contribution to recent warming. The extrapolation of climate cyclicity into the future seems to require a consideration of the levels of greenhouse gases; Berger and Loutre, and Nick Shackleton, used a combination of orbital forcing and greenhouse gas levels to help account for the non-linear aspects of the climate reponse to Milankovitch forcing over the glacial-interglacial cycles. Orbitalforam 17:01, 1 May 2007 (UTC)
The fact is only 'hotly debated' in the public media, not the scientific community. I can't remember the exact details but a recent study of a representative sample of recent scientific literature found that 99% of it agreed that humans were making some contribution to global warming. The same test run on a sample of popular press articles found that only 50% of them reached the same conclusion. Verisimilus T 18:05, 9 May 2007 (UTC)
The quote then goes farther in saying "anthropogenic effects (global warming) are likely to exert a larger influence, at least over the short term" which doesn't just imply that humans are affecting climate but that they are affecting climate more than the Milankovitch cycles do. There is no citation for that assertion. Remove the assertion or at least cite the evidence supporting it. Fair enough? --Rcronk 17:16, 16 May 2007 (UTC)
Well since the Milankovitch cycles don't do much over the short term, that statement doesn't seem very controversial to me. Eve 20:36, 16 May 2007 (UTC)
This is true, since the most rapid Milankovitch cycle is climatic precession, which operates at frequencies of around 20,000 years (with a probable harmonic at around 10,000 years). Most people would not consider these to be short term variations! Interestingly, some of the "worst case" scenarios for anthropogenic climate change do envisage it exceeding the circa 5 degree centigrade mean change associated with the 100,000 year glacial-interglacial cyclicity. Even if the eventual effect is much less strong, it seems uncontroversial to assert that anthropogenic effects are likely to be stronger than Milankovitch ones over the next 100 years, and the latest IPCC report would support that.Orbitalforam 16:07, 5 June 2007 (UTC)
Yup Milankovitch cycle is too long and at wrong point in cycle to explain change. Better to attack the IPCC assumption that they know all about solar radiation variations from plotting 11 year sun cycles. Accurate full spectrum data as we have from current satellites is a lot less comprehensive and more subject to debate. Or perhaps speculate that humans somehow missed the start of slightly denser interstellar "gases" leaking in through the heliopause (say World Wars masked that 0.001% change in opacity of local space). Or attribute climate change to charged particle heating of atmosphere due to falling magnetic field. Something else might be possible since IPCC models only show 3 factor opportunity existed for all past climate changes -- but not all opportunities had climate changes or changes in proportion to the 3 factor model. Good luck. 70.114.133.167 (talk) 13:00, 19 April 2015 (UTC)

Pfvlloyd's revisions

Pfvlloyd please explain the changes you are making. You keep citing Berger and Loutre without identifying which one (they've published together several times). Maybe you know of something new, but I don't know of anything that justifies the large scale changes you are making. Dragons flight 17:10, 5 August 2007 (UTC)

Hi ! - Thanks for your interest. I see a note which says I have not replied to your questions, but since this was only placed a few hours ago, I think it's a bit steep to cancel my edits without even seeing my side of the story. Maybe this is just how you do things here!

Firstly, nearly all my comments arise from a sraightforward application of the celestial mechanics calculations of Earth orbital eccentricity which are universally accepted.

Secondly, Berger and Loutre's refinements of 1991 and 2002 provided very clear data over the past 750,000 years showing the timings and extent of eccentricity cycles. I refer you to 1991 Quaternary Science Reviews, 10: 297-397; and to Science, 23/8/02, pp1287-1288.

If you find that any of my statements are not upheld by this rather basic material, L'ld be very pleased to review and discuss.

But I would have preferred to have had the chance to do so before a summary withdrawal of my suggestions with no notice! Pfvlloyd 22:25, 5 August 2007 (UTC)

I left the note here and at your talk page while you were editing, so you did have a chance to respond. But we can put the changes back if we can agree. However, right now I don't agree. Neither B&L 1991 or 2002 address most of the changes you've made. In particular, the problems section deals with differences between the climate record and the orbital theory. B&L 1991 shows the orbital variations continue over millions of years, but the climate record shows deviations from those expectations (e.g. the transition problem). Similarly the "unsplit peak" and "stage 11 problem" are issues with the climate record that can't be explained with just a study of orbital structure. The 2002 is closer to those topics but focuses on the current interglacial and says little about the timing of the stage-11 deglaciation occurring despite low eccentricity.
The transition problem can be solved as wrong sedimentation calibration. You see NASA data [5] [6] with sedimentation rates (with change by more than 2x) and conversions from "unknown" models. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.49.12.197 (talk) 18:02, 12 September 2009 (UTC)
You also said orbital insolation is reduced 81% during high eccentricity, but that's simply not right. You are comparing aphelion to perihelion at high eccentricity, but you ought to compare aphelion at high eccentricity to aphelion at low eccentricity. And that's without considering that at high latitudes, precession and obliquity have a larger variation on total insolation during a particular season (e.g. during summer) than the effect of eccentricity does. You also say that eccentricity uniquely varies the total solar heating while precession and obliquity only redistribute it, but that's not entirely true either. It's true that eccentricity is the only term that varies that annual integrated power received at Earth's position, but the absorbed radiation also depends on albedo. Since albedo varies significantly with spatial position on Earth, redistribution also alters the total absorption. So in practice the total energy actually absorbed by the Earth varies with all three components.
Also, you made several minor errors, such as labelling eccentricity of 1.07 as 0.07%, etc. If it is a percent it is 7%, but eccentricity is generally written as a number not a percentage. My biggest problem however, is generally your purely justified removal of large parts of the problems section. In my opinion, those issues are generally still unresolved. Dragons flight 23:13, 5 August 2007 (UTC)
Reply -

I didn't see your note before I logged off - it was getting late here. But it was still a rather brief time allowed before posting that I had not responded to requests for an explanation. However, that's water under the bridge.

Thanks for your comments on my edits. OK, I see where you have problems with them. I think I can offer you reasonable arguments for most of your comments, but some are just plain differences of interpretation which we may never agree on, but that's science!! And I found some of the text very confused, so obviously so that I did not think an explanation for an edit was necessary in those cases.

However, I have deadlines to meet just now and cannot reply properly. Give me a day or two and I will respond properly. I really look forward to discussing these issues with you - an excellent opportunity to improve insight.

Regards.Pfvlloyd 15:22, 6 August 2007 (UTC)

In addition to Dragons flight's questions about interpretation of the sources (which I can't comment on because I haven't read those sources), I found the writing in Pfvlloyd's version harder to read than the pre-Pfvlloyd-edit (or post-Dragons flight-revert) version. In particular, the lead section was bulked-up considerably, with a lot of numbers that might trip up readers looking for a quick overview -- a problem that remains to a degree in the pre-edit, post-revert version. Correctness is more important than readability, but clear writing also matters. (Apologies if this sounds like I'm picking on your writing. It's possible that my impression of unclarity is partly because I looked at the diff more closely than the post-Pfvlloyd-edit version; if that's the case I apologize for mentioning anything more than the bulk in the lead section.) -- Steve Schonberger 16:14, 6 August 2007 (UTC)

Maximum and minimum latitudes for the arctic and antarctic circles?

The axial tilt changes slightly on a short period, less than a year, which moves the circles toward and away from the poles a bit. What would the maximum and minimum latitudes be over the 41,000 year cycle? Now for the math wizard question. What's the total surface area of the two belts the circles wander over? An important thing to remember as this relates to climate change is the very different topography of the north and south poles. The north is water surrounded mostly by land while the south is land surrounded by an unbroken ring of water. In winter, the area above the circle can get heat only via convection and a small amount that comes from the interior of Earth. The north gets heat both from water and air convection while most of the south gets heat only from air convection. the convection can't keep up with the radiant heat loss during the time the sun doesn't rise above the horizon. As the tilt decreases, there's less surface area with 24 hours or more constant darkness to radiate heat. Anyone who remembers the basic science classes they had in school knows that a planet with less axial tilt has an overall more temperate climate than a planet with a greater axial tilt, yet I've talked with several people who are convinced this should make the poles *cooler*, and thus "proof" of anthropogenic "global warming". —Preceding unsigned comment added by Bizzybody (talkcontribs) 13:30, 20 October 2007 (UTC)

Question regarding time-frames

I want to understand the basis for these theories. What is the basis being used for the timeframe estimates used in this article? How did they calculate the 41,000 years and the 100,000 years? Are those numbers calculated based on geological observations tied to assumptions about radiometric dating and stratigraphic principles? Thank you. 68.253.24.169 13:53, 29 October 2007 (UTC)

Re. "Question Regarding Time Frames"

It is inappropriate to insert personal queries into Wikipedia articles to get attention. It is a form of vandalism. I have removed the query from the article.

Re. "What is the basis being used for the timeframe estimates used in this article? How did they calculate the 41,000 years and the 100,000 years? re those numbers calculated based on geological observations tied to assumptions about radiometric dating and stratigraphic principles?":

I am not a geologist or paleoclimatologist, but since nobody with real credentials has answered the query I will say this: Data about climate variations in the range of tens to hundreds of thousands of years ago are available from a rich range of sources that do not depend on radiometric dating. The study of climate over this time scale depends heavily on ice cores and cores of ocean-floor sediments. These deposits record the yearly layering of snow and sediment from the present time back in unbroken series to, in the case of at least one Antarctic ice core, about 800,000 years ago. Each year adds a new, thin layer like the growth of a tree. Although it is my understanding that the precise dating of these layers is a complex professional matter, to a rough approximation, at least, one dates the layers simply by counting them, exactly like tree rings.

See the Wikipedia articles on Paleoclimatology and Ice Cores for more information. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 72.173.17.89 (talk) 18:41, 3 November 2007 (UTC)

Ultimately, the timing of Milankovitch cycles is obtained by physical models: precession, nutation, torque, and orbital changes influenced by the moon and other planets, all plugged into simulators. Written history, tree rings, ice cores, sediments, and fossils are all useful to calibrate these models, if you can be confident that each layer represents a uniform time interval, and that migration of gases or particulate does not occur. To gain this confidence, you have to examine and correlate many individual ice cores, sediments, tree rings, and fossils. One such vital calibration is the iridium anomaly at the K-T boundary -- 99.233.186.4 (talk) 16:39, 23 May 2010 (UTC)

Predicted temperature changes based on change in eccentricity, tilt, and wobble of the earth

In the October issue (2007) of National Geographic there is a poster called Greenhouse Earth. The bottom graphic line shows how the change in eccentricity, tilt, and wobble of the earth should have impacted global climate changed for the last 400,000 years. What is most cool about this is you can see changes in sea level, temperature, and co2 concentrations at the same time. The graph suggests that we should be in a cooling period for the last 100 thousand years....which is a concern because we are in a one of the most warm periods over the last 400,000 years. Is this correct. I didn't find any citations for this. It strange that the dotted line doesn't have a label. How solid is this evidence. Perhaps it belongs on this page. SoilMan2007 (talk) January 1, 2008

Not sure exactly which poster you mean. "the last 100 thousand years" must be wrong. About 12kyr ago we were leaving the last glacial, ie warming. For the last ~10kyr we've been in an interglacial, in which temperatures have been roughly constant. The future (in the absence of human forcing) prediction, is quite complex but probably not a full glacial for 50 kyr. See-also global cooling William M. Connolley (talk) 20:04, 1 January 2008 (UTC)
Hi William. Thanks for your response. I have a feeling that it is likely an error. According to the national geographic poster (October 2007 issue), they show a graph that indicates temperature changes that would be expected from changes in eccentricity, tilt, and wobble. That graph would indicates that about 120,000 years ago or so, there should have been cooling when in fact we didn't have much change in temperature till about 10,000 years ago. This would be very significant if it were true. But I think it has to be wrong. Take a look if you have a chance. Thanks again! SoilMan2007 (talk) (Tom) January 1, 2008. —Preceding comment was added at 23:32, 1 January 2008 (UTC)
Try Image:Vostok-ice-core-petit.png for one version of the temperature record William M. Connolley (talk) 22:08, 2 January 2008 (UTC)
I'm talking about what would be predicted based on those orbital factors rather what actually occurred. —Preceding unsigned comment added by SoilMan2007 (talkcontribs) 12:59, 3 January 2008 (UTC)
I doubt I can make sense of that without seeing the Nat Geog thing you're referring to. But T can certainly be "postdicted" from insolation, if you do enough fitting William M. Connolley (talk) 22:18, 3 January 2008 (UTC)
I think you are being overly generous William. With sufficient free parameters one can curve fit in an ad hoc manner, but such fits have little explanatory power. If instead you start with insolation and try to extract a temperature model, then I've yet to see a model that correctly captures the timing and intensity of the different ice ages without having to put those in by hand. Long time-scale modeling with dynamic ice sheets is still a very young field, and there are many unresolved problems there. I'm sure that whatever model National Geographic showed, it was an illustrative one rather than a definitive study of what solar forcing should produce. Simply put, we don't yet have a sufficient understanding of how solar forcing triggers the growth and decay of continental ice sheets to have a definitive set of predictions. Dragons flight (talk) 23:03, 3 January 2008 (UTC)
Aren't we pretty close with this challenge (and the 8 models?) [7]? --Kim D. Petersen (talk) 23:36, 3 January 2008 (UTC)
Those models are predictions of CO2 from measured temperature data. That is a radically different and much easier problem than predicting temperature from orbital dynamics data. Dragons flight (talk) 23:48, 3 January 2008 (UTC)
Yes - i was aware of that - but at least the Paillard model uses only insulation. It was with this in mind that i asked. --Kim D. Petersen (talk) 06:50, 4 January 2008 (UTC)
I agree that it was likely for illustrative purposes. The reason I was concerned was that the graphic implies that we should be in a cooling cycle for the last 100 thousand years rather than warming (warming seems to be happening). I would think that if we are so sure of the impacts of these factors, that scientists should be able to come up with a model to predict their effect. Anyway, thank you all for your responses. I'm really grateful. SoilMan2007 (talk) —Preceding comment was added at 02:48, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
There is a useful discussion of factors involved in the long-term build up and decay of ice sheets here: http://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/docs/00/29/81/22/PDF/cpd-2-43-2006.pdf (Climate of the Past Discussions, 2, 43-78). The more linear components of the climate system appear to respond relatively straightforwardly (with some amplification, and perhaps earlier some North-South cancellation at precession) to forcing by the orbital components tilt and precession. The non-linearity at eccentricity periodicities remains problematic, but both William Ruddiman and (before his death) Nick Shackleton concluded that CO2 was likely to be a significant part of the mechanism responsible for the nonlinearity, as a component of a feedback system translating forcing into climate change. Ruddiman argues for a different interpretation to Shackleton on the phase relationships (timing offsets) and initiating mechanisms involved, but agrees that orbital forcing plus carbon dioxide variation is able to account for most of the climate variability of the last million years. The disagreement arises from a difference in the interpretation of the benthic marine oxygen isotope signal and its temperature and ice volume components, which Shackleton (Science, 2000) interpreted as having major phase differences between them. Orbitalforam (talk) 09:58, 30 April 2009 (UTC)

Wikiproject Earth

Hello i have recently proposed the Wikiproject Earth. This Wikiproject`s scope includes this article. This wikiproject will overview the continents, oceans, atsmophere and global warming Please Voice your opinion by clicking anywhere on this comment except for my name. --IwilledituTalk :)Contributions —Preceding comment was added at 15:35, 30 March 2008 (UTC)

Axial tilt angle

The opening paragraph of the article states that the axial tilt varies between 21.5° and 24.5°. However, the section "Axial Tilt (Obliquity)" states that it varies between 22.1° and 24.5°. The article Axial tilt seems to agree with the latter range although it mentions the 21.5° low value in section "Long period variations", but also questions it as a possible one-time overshoot. I just happened to read this article and am not an expert on the subject, so I don't feel comfortable fixing this disparity, but most likely in the same article we should either stick to same numbers or explain the differences. --Antti Salonen (talk) 18:35, 4 June 2008 (UTC)

In the same paragraph there's this sentence which refers to a particular time: "It is currently 23.44 degrees and decreasing." What time are we talking about here?

Of course this is somewhat a rhetorical question. More properly put, I suggest a new formulation of this. It might go like "As of 2014, it is ??? degrees and decreasing. [reference]" Cemkay (talk) 14:34, 4 March 2014 (UTC)

captions

Captions for the images would be nice, especially Orbital_variation.svg. Rtdrury (talk) 07:19, 12 August 2008 (UTC)

eccentricity

In this section the sets of numbers: (high eccentricity of 0.058) and (variation of −0.03 to +0.02) seem to conflict. Is the high 0.058 or is it 0.02? Rtdrury (talk) 07:31, 12 August 2008 (UTC)

the future

I propose expanding "the future" section with the images found on my user page. Incredio (talk) 21:50, 31 May 2009 (UTC)

Orbital Inclination period?

"The inclination of Earth's orbit drifts up and down relative to its present orbit with a cycle having a period of about 70,000 years....The inclination of the Earth's orbit has a 100,000 year cycle relative to the invariable plane."

Might I suggest that attention be given this apparent discrepancy? The period cannot be both values. I tracked this back to SEWilco way back in 2005 (3/7), and since it's stood for so long without revision and I hold no expertise, I'm hesitant to revise it myself. However I note that the two sources in the paragraph both reference 100k in abstract. Could somebody resolve the discrepancy? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Jjchong (talkcontribs) 02:57, 19 August 2009 (UTC)

I think there is some garbling here but it may be a bit complex. See for example [8] William M. Connolley (talk) 19:56, 12 September 2009 (UTC)

Historical development

I think it would be nice to have a section on historical development of the theory. It would be a good section; this theory is probably notable for being the best example of a theory disproved multiple times by observations :-) William M. Connolley (talk) 23:13, 14 December 2009 (UTC)

Yes, the various theories that were knocked down humiliated a lot of people. David Archer's book about the history of climate science ends every other chapter with "and so he died friendless and mocked by the scientific community." I no longer have access to the book ("the long thaw"), but it would make an excellent source for a history section. Would involve lots of cross-linking to ancient scientists like Agassiz. Therealhazel (talk) 06:31, 29 December 2009 (UTC)

Solar Irradiance

Is there an estimate of solar irradiance in the last glacial minimum? Joseph449008 (talk) 22:15, 19 December 2009 (UTC)

Do you mean, taking out orbital effects? If you do "about the same as now" is what I'd expect. I'm not sur how far the Be stuff goes back, but the effects aren't big anyway. I think William M. Connolley (talk) 22:35, 19 December 2009 (UTC)

Gerard Roe's paper - this Wiki text is obsolete

I just added this section because someone badly needs to update this completely obsolete article. Because of the well-cited 2006 article below, pretty much all the criticisms in this Wikipedia article are out of touch. The readers will be grateful to anyone who will update it - but the amount of required work is nontrivial.

Many of the doubts about the theory disappeared in 2006 when Gerard Roe published a paper, In defense of Milankovitch, in Geophysical Research Letters, Vol. 33, L24703, doi:10.1029/2006GL027817, 2006. [9] He correctly identified the insolation with the time-derivative of the measured ice volume, rather than the ice volume itself, and obtained a spectacular agreement that has solved the 100,000-year problem and other problems below. By taking the derivative, the short-duration, higher-frequency cycles are amplified. Until this text takes Roe's paper into account, you should realize that it is obsolete. --Lumidek (talk) 09:37, 6 July 2010 (UTC)

Thank you for thinking of us. However, the text you added isn't acceptable, for reasons that I would hope are obvious but which I can explain if they aren't William M. Connolley (talk) 09:44, 6 July 2010 (UTC)
This is way too much, Mr Connolley. You know very well that you don't have any reasons that can be explained. Your goal is to keep obsolete, misleading, and downright untrue material at most important pages about the climate on Wikipedia. For everyone: what can we do so that the account of William M. Connolley is disabled and never enabled again? --Lumidek (talk) 13:50, 6 July 2010 (UTC)
User:William M. Connolley/For me/The naming of cats Dr Motl. But I do have reasons. Who (other than you) asserts that Roe has had the last word? He correctly identified isn't good. He may be right, but he may be just another paper. a spectacular agreement - again, who says so? Referencing the paper is fine; adding the WP:PEACOCK stuff isn't William M. Connolley (talk) 17:21, 6 July 2010 (UTC)

I've added an NPOV tag to this article because the current version tries to hide the most important modern insight about the cycles, included in Roe's 2006 paper. I encourage educated readers to read the paper [10], check its merits and citations, decide whether I am right that it is impossible for the content of this paper to be neglected or denied by this Wikipedia article, and fix all the obsolete information on this page. Many things claimed to be problems of the theory have been resolved. WMC has very "unrelated" reasons why he wants the key paper by Roe to be suppressed - they're much more related to other theories about the climate than the content of this article which is the Milankovitch theory. --Lumidek (talk) 13:12, 7 July 2010 (UTC)

Oh Lubos, and you were doing so well William M. Connolley (talk) 14:23, 7 July 2010 (UTC)
I think Roe should be mentioned in the article. Can anyone describe in lay terms his reasoning for the math that he did? That is, Roe presents his solution as that he was thinking about the logic of earth processes first and later found that the resulting plot matched very well. Fotoguzzi (talk) 21:40, 28 April 2012 (UTC)

Inconsistencies and neutrality

The article mentions that changes provoked by the Milankovitch cycles around the north pole are more significant than elsewhere on the planet because the north pole has a big land mass and land reacts quicker to changes than the oceans. This is puzzling because of two reasons. First, land reacts much slower than the oceans to changes in climate and not the other way around: this is because the specific heat of soil is much higher than that of water, making soil change temperature much slower than water under the same conditions. Secondly, the north pole has no land mass unlike the south pole which has an entire continent beneath the ice: this is one of the reasons (in fact, the one described as the most significant in all the sources I've encountered so far) why the south pole is much colder than the north pole. Moreover, the article lacks a few important references as to the source of some statements.

Other posts in this discussion page have mentioned similar errors. Perhaps this article not only lacks neutrality but also scientific basis and should be marked as having a disputable accuracy. The neutrality issue is clear but the references indicated in the article itself show, for the most part, that the subject of this article is considered a hypothesis rather than a generally accepted theory. Perhaps the issue of neutrality could be overcome by simply changing the article's name to mention that it is a hipothesis and by making an accurate assessment of the theory's acceptance among the scientific community in it.

As an example of the validity of this form of resolving such an issue, it might be useful to realize that an article about creationism is as valid as an article about evolutionism as long as it is specifically marked as a hypothesis (and not a scientific fact or accepted theory) and the general scientific opinion about it is mentioned (in this case, that it is considered by the large majority of the scientific community as false).

Arkaever (talk) 11:48, 14 July 2010 (UTC)

Dear Arkaever, what you write makes absolutely no sense - and your spelling of "hypothesis" with "hi" at the beginning is the first hint that it is so.
Everyone who has ever visited places both in the continental climate and near the ocean must know that places near the oceans have much more stable temperatures (while the continental climate has much more brutal variations) because the relevant layer of water has much higher heat capacity than the relevant layer of soil. The water is circulating and can actually swallow or release the heat from up to hundreds of meters of the upper ocean pretty quickly; on the other hand, it takes years for the heat to get dozens of meters of the soil.
That's also why the continental ice sheets are much more variable - and much more important for the global variability of the climate - than effects that occur on the sea. They may appear or disappear mostly on the Northern Hemisphere. At any rate, the Milankovitch theory works, as settled in Roe's paper. You shouldn't try to promote your amateurish and scientifically meaningless opinions about difficult subjects on Wikipedia - opinions that, as you admit, are on par with creationism. You simply have neither credentials nor knowledge to do it, OK?--Lumidek (talk) 12:37, 16 July 2010 (UTC)
Dear Lumidek,
I do hope this lengthy text does not go against the policy of wikipedia because, as is the case of elected representatives in my country's legislative political body, I hope I will have the right to defend my credibility and my dignity in public, since I was attacked also in public.
Although a few of the lines of your comment are neither constructive nor polite, since I am a cientist, that has not prevented me from investigating thoroughly your statement with impartiality.
I admit my error completely: now that I think of it, the Gulf Current would be impossible if the specific heat of water was, like I mentioned, beneath the one of soil. However, there are still some points that are correct in my comment, such as the fact that it is the soil beneath the antartic that makes it colder than the artict (exactly because of the true nature of water and soil that I had, unfortunately, confused). If I revise my argument, it becomes clear that, since water has a high specific heat, the thick ice sheets of the north pole will acumulate a lot more energy than the combination of ice and soil that exists in the south pole, thus explaining the difference in temperature.
I will re-study geophysics in order to be able to make a better and more accurate contribution if I decide to try to enter this debate once more.
Now that I have replied to the scientific nature of your contribution, I would like to defend my intelectual dignity from your ill-tempered comment.
Your statement about the word "hypothesis" is completely false, as you may discover if you actually take the time to consult a dictionary (either physical or digital). That means that, just as I made an honest mistake by mixing concepts I should have analysed with care first, so you too produced a fallacious argument. There is one very important difference between our two arguments, though: while I made a mistake because I was too enthusiastic to contribute, you made a mistake because you were too enthusiastic to provoke me, negatively criticize me or simply atempt to empower your own ego by personally attacking someone in public. That is the true sign of a hypocrite sophist that has a pathological need to make other people miserable. You are, indeed, not a scientist at all.
If you knew anything about what it means to be a scientist, you would know that it is a calling, not something you become just because you get a diploma. A scientist will not leave his work in his office when he goes home, to his personal life, simply because that work is his personal life.
I had the privilege of talking to a couple of Nobel Prize recipients about ten years ago, after a presentation about science itself, and the first thing I noticed about them was their humility. One of them actually took the time to correct the misconceptions of a neophyte (such as I was back then), discussing advanced physics with me, lowering the complexity of the concepts he knew all too well to a very advanced point, to a level that would be understandble by an aspiring scientist with little or no experience.
As long as one understands the spirit of science and is able to make the scientific process come true, realizing mistakes, creating new hypothesis, trying to understand with an open mind what one is studying, I am very much willing to consider that person a scientist, even if that person is simply reinventing the wheel, so to speak.
What would it truly mean if I had made an orthographic mistake? Is switching two letters in a word actually a sign of an ill-conceived argument? Could it not be a simple mistake? My native language is not english, as it is probably the case for many persons who came to the english wikipedia, and twelve years have passed since I completed the Certificate of Proficiency in English: this could explain my poor english. However, my true problem with english is only memorizing the correct spelling of certain words, which is why, even now as I write (as I did before), I use the Cambridge online dictionary to correct my woeful mistakes. My form of expression, in english, is, as far as most people who read my books are concerned, adequate to my objectives and I am not ashamed of the few mistakes I make outside orthography because, since I have spent my time reading many english works since I was very young, I know that, with time, they will become even rarer.
What nerve did I strike in you? What offence did I perpretate? Are you someone who belivies religiously in certain scientific theories just as much as christians want to believe in creationism? If that is the case, please ponder what you did, what you do, and what all of this means.
By the way, just so we are clear, I find this theory most interesting and I am pleased that the article is no longer considered lacking in neutrality. My proposal about inaccuracy was not a reflexion of the possible inaccuracy of the theory itself but of the arguments that were being used to sustain it. My idea about the different temperatures between the artic and the antartic was correct, but it was based on the wrong explanation. That is the true contribution you made to my scientific life (as well as an important lesson about being too impulsive).
You have taught me something for, as I have heard once, one should "be thankful for your enemies for they teach you patience."
Sincerely yours,
Arkaever
84.18.242.245 (talk) 08:59, 17 July 2010 (UTC)
I am sorry, the former text was authored by me, Arkaever. I forgot to login. I will place this line here to prove my identity. Thank you.
Arkaever (talk) 09:18, 17 July 2010 (UTC)
The article mentions that changes provoked by the Milankovitch cycles around the north pole are more significant than elsewhere on the planet because the north pole has a big land mass and land reacts quicker to changes than the oceans - not really I think - exactly which text are you reading? The accepted theory is that the Earth is most sensitive to insolation variations at around 65 degrees north - this wasn't established theoretically, but by playsin with the equations until you get the right answer. This is envisaged as working because there is a lot of land at that latitude (unlike the equivalent in the southern hemisphere). So there is lots of space for snow-albedo feedback and lots of place for icesheets to build up. I recommend the Imbrie and Imbrie book William M. Connolley (talk) 21:06, 17 July 2010 (UTC)

The section on Apsidal precession needs looking at as it is currently broken.Sapient Homo (talk) 18:40, 22 November 2010 (UTC)

Sand pile antics?

Venting

Here come's the newbie, just asking for a sock on the chin (Askaever) from the loser (Lumidek),(by coming in the middle of an argument): while the winner (WMC) sits silently smirking over his recent victory. Gee whiz, what a waste of talent. There are many comments made by brighter minds, so will paraphrase one: Don't open your mouth and remove eventual doubt over your idiocy.

Further, citation of scientific consensus does not prove anything other than scientists as a group generally are bullies (bully: a coward who postures as brave man, when he has group backing); ref. scientific consensus on anthropic climate effects.

That said, a major problem is lack of references to highly relevant co-factors such as vulcanism feeding oxygen creation in the oceans, and similar non-cyclical disturbances. While this may be a discussion of one theory, there are other factors influencing climate.

Similarly, using "the exception to prove the rule" (ie theory, in this case) as one expressed it, seems to me as idiotic. I thought it was the rule you gentlemen were discussing.

Lastly, the most important "rule" is that remarking on other people ideas, opinions, etc, by attacking the person, instead reveals a lack of argument. Besides, it is rude and childish.

It has been quiet here for almost a year. Are you still exhausted or occupied defending other piles? Now get in line. The pile of stones are there ready. Written by one without credentials, or need of them. Idealist707 (talk) 20:48, 3 July 2011 (UTC)

Land

This is discussed above, but it seems to have gone nowhere:

Changes near the north polar area, about 65 degrees North, are considered important due to the great amount of land. Land masses respond to temperature change more quickly than oceans, which have a higher effective heat capacity, because of the mixing of surface and deep water and the fact that the specific heat of solids is generally lower than that of water.

I don't really believe this. I think its albedo feedback from seasonal snow cover. Either way, its stated without refs William M. Connolley (talk) 22:16, 5 October 2012 (UTC)

Age of the Earth

Reading about the Milankovitch cycles is beyond my capacity of scientific knowledge. I am reading a website http://www.earthhistory.org.uk/questions-of-age/cyclicity-in-chalk where I believe it is saying that these cycles determine that radioactive dating is incorrect - as proof that the earth is younger. I may be reading both sites incorrectly. Would someone either add a section or a criticism section whether this is true or not?Mylittlezach (talk) 04:17, 14 October 2012 (UTC)

This talk page is for discussing this article, not creationist web sites. They would probably be glad to chat with you over there. Eau(W)oo (talk) 04:39, 14 October 2012 (UTC)
You don't have to be rude about it. What ever happened to tolerance and discussion? Biffryt (talk) 18:15, 16 April 2014 (UTC)

Astronomy

This is an astronomy topic and the article should be limited to the specifics of the subject, Milankovitch cycles. "Global Warming", "Climate Change", "Greenhouse gasses" and the effects thereof, whether you are certain of them or not, are not astronomy, and are therefore not appropriate for this article. SteveOak (talk) 08:59, 30 December 2012 (UTC)

"human impact on the environment, anthropogenic effects may modify or even overwhelm orbital effects" as there is no reference cited so this is, at best, speculation, it is not suitable material for a scientific article. SteveOak (talk) 09:07, 30 December 2012 (UTC)

You're wrong about how limited this topic is. I've reverted your deletions William M. Connolley (talk) 10:59, 30 December 2012 (UTC)

"You're wrong" is not sufficiently specific. Please cite your objections as I have done. Please cite with specificity how "Global Warming", "Climate Change", "Greenhouse gasses", and human impact on the environment the potential effects thereof are the results of Milankovitch cycles. SteveOak (talk) 18:59, 30 December 2012 (UTC)

You're right, "you're wrong" would indeed not be sufficiently specific. So its just as well I didn't say that. I said You're wrong about how limited this topic is. Your assertion was that this was an astronomy topic, and the article should therefore be limited to matters of astronomy. This assertion is wrong: you could, for example, look at the categories at the bottom. As for "how ... and human impact on the environment the potential effects thereof are the results of Milankovitch cycles" I've not a clue what you're on about. For your information, "human impact on the environment" is not a result of Milankovitch cycles (except in the really very limited sense that humans grew as a species under the influence of climate variations part of which were M cycles. Was that what you meant? William M. Connolley (talk) 20:04, 30 December 2012 (UTC)
It's all geek to me, but surely the answer to SteveOak's question is reference 7. On an unrelated topic, having looked at the article the lead seemed to imply that Milankovitch cycles preceded versions by Joseph Adhemar, James Croll and others, when of course Croll cycles were published in the 19th century, so I've modified the wording to make that clearer. If the the "others" were 20th C, the phrasing could be "Joseph Adhemar, James Croll and later by others". . . dave souza, talk 20:27, 30 December 2012 (UTC)

"you could, for example, look at the categories at the bottom" You are attempting to use circular logic to justify the inclusion of non-relevant information. Repeating the same non-sequitor does not make the extraneous material suddenly relevant. SteveOak (talk) 01:54, 31 December 2012 (UTC)

If you sincerely have no clue what I am "going in about", perhaps you should desist from re-inserting the non-relavant information. SteveOak (talk) 01:54, 31 December 2012 (UTC)

"Milankovitch theory describes the collective effects of changes in the Earth's movements upon its climate." Since greenhouse gasses are not one of "Earth's movements" they are not relevant to the discussion. If this were an article on the collective possible influences on the Earth's climate, you could then include Milankovitch's theory in that article but that does not justify the reverse. SteveOak (talk) 01:59, 31 December 2012 (UTC)

Please read the sources, Milankovitch cycles were discovered in relation to climate change and relate directly to global warming. This is an aspect that can be developed further in the article, as it's a notable aspect of this phenomenon. . . dave souza, talk 06:02, 31 December 2012 (UTC)

Milankovitch developed his theory in the early 1900's and was focused on a correlation between the eccentricity of the Earth's orbit and ice ages. http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Features/Milankovitch/milankovitch_3.php Long before 'climate change' was a consideration. SteveOak (talk) 06:25, 31 December 2012 (UTC)

Eh, ice ages are climate change. We should really show the history of this finding, Weart is a good place to start. More recent papers on the timing and contribution of CO2 feedbacks are discussed at RC, we should refer to these developments. . dave souza, talk 06:36, 31 December 2012 (UTC)
It's not unusual in palaeoclimate literature to try to resolve the complex role of CO2 in glacial/interglacial cycles - it is normally understood to be both a responder to and amplifier of Milankovitch forcing (eg Shackleton, The 100,000-Year Ice-Age cycle identified and found to lag temperature, carbon dioxide, and orbital eccentricity, Science, 2000; Tzedakis, Channell, Hodell, Kleiven and Skinner, (2012) Determining the natural length of the current interglacial, Nature Geoscience, 5 (2), pp. 138-14; Saltzman, Maasch, Verbitsky, Geophys. Res. Lett. 20, 1051 (1993); Loutre, Geophys. Res. Lett. 22 783 (1995)). So our current global experiment in climate sensitivity to CO2 is directly relevant to the understanding of the normal operation of Milankovitch Cycles. It's possible we won't like the answer. Orbitalforam (talk) 14:14, 29 May 2013 (UTC)

Needs more work

Is this article about Earth or about Milankovitch cycles in general? Right now it's very Earth focused, but it includes orbital simulations that have nothing to do with Earth, misleading the reader... ~D — Preceding unsigned comment added by 174.28.166.179 (talk) 02:35, 21 June 2015 (UTC)

Looking here, and at Milutin Milanković, I see that the history of all this needs more work. Broadly, this theory has been got wrong by more people than almost anything else, and MM semi-lucked-out that it ended up with his name on it William M. Connolley (talk) 21:51, 1 January 2013 (UTC)

Indeed. I've noticed Scottish geologists talking of Croll cycles, but he doesn't seem to have been the first either. . . dave souza, talk 22:01, 1 January 2013 (UTC)
They could just as easily be called that William M. Connolley (talk) 22:49, 1 January 2013 (UTC)

OK, notes towards this (from Imbrie and Imbrie) starting from MM starting, with Croll's theory dead:

  • MM works out in principle a theory of ice ages, based on orbital variations; publishes
  • after WWI, MM comes home and gets a postcard from Koppen; they collaborate
  • orbital forcing causes different insolation variations in different latitutes and seasons; Croll assumed high NH winter, MM influenced by K goes for summer
  • MM, using results from Pilgrim not available to Croll, works out insolation over 650kyr at 55, 60 and 65 N,
  • Mails results to K, who likes the ones at 65 N, as they seem to match dates (from P+B) for Wurm, Riss, Mindel, Gunz ice ages, at least a bit (fig 24 in I&I; note that (as always) the curves show most power at 40kyr period
  • Wegner likes it too
  • unfortunately the theory predicts short ice ages. Fortunately, obs are so vague that its hard (at the time) to know this is wrong
  • on the whole, Europeans end up accepting it and Americans not
  • radiocarbon dating, coming in around 1950, destroys this version of MM's theory. By 1965 its dead
  • ocean sediment cores start being analysed, say 1950-65. Emiliani / Imbrie / Shackleton / etc, confusion over what formmanifera, isotope, etc actually meant
  • lots more dating work, including sea-level from terraces. Brunhes–Matuyama reversal found to provide absolute date for sediment cores ~1968
  • the P+B dating of European ice ages used by K to confirm MM is found to be wrong (Kukla, 1969)
  • ~1969: realisation that the major ice age period is 100kyr; M theory totally doesn't predict this
  • based on these obs, people retro-fit 100kyr onto M theory
  • (somewhere in here is a ~factor-of-two error in chronology getting resolved)
  • Hays, Imbrie, Shackleton '76.

William M. Connolley (talk) 22:49, 1 January 2013 (UTC)

Ok, so far so good. A brief mention needed of puzzle of ice ages and earlier attempts. Weart covers M onwards pretty well, discussing the same names with more emphasis on the following; changes in insolation inadequate to explain changes in glaciation c. 1952, Broecker 1968 finding correlation in Barbados, Dansgaard 1954 providing isotope method for ice cores which Camp Century and Byrd Station cores in 60s showed cycle of rapid warming and slow cooling, Vostok team 1985 finding variation in CO2 levels + methane amplifying temp changes and explaining why both poles showed same cycle, by 80s concerns that modern CO2 levels exceeded past levels, but still multiple explanations of detailed feedbacks. Add to that recent research by Huybers, Shakun et al. and Schmidt et al. . . dave souza, talk 12:39, 2 January 2013 (UTC)
Possibly of interest: Smith, H. J. (2013). "Feeling the Pressure". Science. 339 (6115): 11–15. doi:10.1126/science.339.6115.11-c. . . dave souza, talk 14:02, 6 January 2013 (UTC)
Is it really the function of Wikipedia to right perceived historical wrongs? - Especially when users' perceptions vary so markedly! It's quite true that the dominant cyclicity was expected to be obliquity forced - and guess what - over most of the geological climate record it is. It's the Late Pleistocene that's weird, courtesy of its habit (not unique, but fairly unusual) of developing massive ice sheets (up to now). There's even a lot that could be said to qualify the apparent dominance of 100kyr cyclicity in the fused temperature/ice volume carbonate O18 record. When you've got an accepted name for something that works as a tag, I think you need a pretty good reason to change it. Not to dispute that the history is interesting! For example, there's the way Nick Shackleton was able to point out on the basis of orbital tuning that the radiometric age of the B/M boundary was too young (Shackleton, N. J., A. Berger, W. R. Peltier, An alternative astronomical calibration of the lower Pleistocene timescale based on ODP Site 677, Transactions Royal Soc. Edinburgh: Earth Sciences, 81, 251–261, 1990) - and funnily enough, it was, by exactly that amount. So the history of the theory in its widest sense is certainly not all bad news, and there's not much reason to suppose it has a short shelf life ahead of it ...Orbitalforam (talk) 14:51, 23 April 2013 (UTC)

The Galactic Plane

My original text:

The Solar system also moves up and down relative to the Galactic Plane, in a cycle of 62 million years, wandering 230 light years out of the plane as a result. According to Richard Muller and Robert Rohde, this cycle closly matches that of marine extinctions in the past 542 million years. The death rate is highest when the solar system is located at a maximum distance from the galactic plane in the direction of galactic north and lowest when it is down south. [1]

An explanation for this has been proposed by Mikhail Medvedev and Adrian Melott. They point out that the galactic halo is not symmetric between north and south. The galaxy emits a wind that consists of protons and other charged particles, creating a cloud that extends into intergalactic space but is lopsided towards the south. These protons make up a large fraction of high energy cosmic rays that impact the Earth. The effect is so great that the Earth receives five times more cosmic radiation at its northernmost point relative to the galactic plane compared to its southernmost point. .[2]

This lopsided effect exists because the Milky Way travels at a speed of 200 kilometres per second in the direction of the Virgo supercluster of galaxies, which lie to the galactic north. The intergalactic medium, consisting mostly of ionized hydrogen gas, serves as an impediment, which has deformed the galactic halo towards the south. When the halo gas meets the interstellar medium, a bow shock is created. The energy in the shock front is transferred via a magnetic process to protons from both the intergalactic medium and the halo. These are the protons which form the cosmic rays. [3]

This edit was undone by William M. Connolley for the reason of wrong timescale. I will not pretend to be an expert in either geology, climatology, or astronomy, but the definition of Milankovitch cycles in the article is: "the collective effects of changes in the Earth's movements upon its climate". The motion of the Earth (or the solar system) relative to the galactic plane is a change in the Earth's movements, and according to my references it does impact the climate. 069952497a (talk) 21:52, 18 January 2013 (UTC)

Maybe we need to improve the defn. M effect stuff doesn't cover really long timescales William M. Connolley (talk) 21:59, 18 January 2013 (UTC)
Also, the Galactic Plane Extinction theory seems to be about mass extinctions rather than climate per se. I suppose they might argue that climate was implicated in the mass extinctions, but I think they would need more evidence to do so (eg evidence of a 62 Ma climate cycle rather than just the occurrence of extinction events roughly every 62 Ma). The idea is somewhat reminiscent of the "Nemesis" theory ... Orbitalforam (talk) 16:21, 24 May 2013 (UTC)
So topic is how climate changes due changes in earth orbital movements within the context of the solar system - and not including movements of the earth as integral part of the entire solar system, local cluster, or any larger astronomical movement scale. Seems fairly obvious - if not 100% all encompassing of all weather (definition of space weather includes cosmic background radiation, etc) and influences (interstellar gases dust, magnetic fields, etc). 70.114.133.167 (talk) 22:19, 19 April 2015 (UTC)
  1. ^ Robert A. Rohde, Richard A. Muller (2005). "Cycles in fossil diversity". Nature. 434: 208.
  2. ^ Mikhail V. Medvedev, Adrian L. Melott (2007). "Do extragalactic cosmic rays induce cycles in fossil diversity?". Astrophysical Journal. 664: 879.
  3. ^ Davies, Paul (2010). The Eerie Silence. Boston, New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. pp. 103–104. ISBN 978-0-547-13324-9. {{cite book}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)

Possible useful reference for 100,000 year problem section

Science Daily
Why an Ice Age Occurs Every 100,000 Years: Climate and Feedback Effects Explained
al-Shimoni (talk) 22:21, 12 August 2013 (UTC)

I agree; this is the most detailed model run over this time span to date and shows how the 100,000 year cyclicity can emerge from the combination of forcing and ice sheet dynamics. Doesn't solve all the problems or answer all the questions - but it is a major contribution.Orbitalforam (talk) 16:36, 16 April 2014 (UTC)

Global warming and axial tilt

I just deleted some text and a citation about global warming that was at the end of the section on axial tilt. I think it is laudable to include a reference to anthropogenic climate change in a section discussing how all of these disparate factors add up, but muddying up a section that explicitly is only discussing one of the factors is bad narration. 67.175.146.68 (talk) 16:29, 28 December 2013 (UTC)

I agree. I took the refs you removed and used them to beef up the bit on climate change in the last section on prediction. If anyone wants to improve the wording I added, they should feel free. Sailsbystars (talk) 19:50, 28 December 2013 (UTC)

Merge from Orbital forcing

The following discussion is an archived discussion of a

Merge Proposal and / or Redirect. Please do not modify it.
The result of the request for the Proposed Merger of {requested article} into this talk page's article was:

Not Done–Consensus Reached Against Merge.
— — — — —

There has been a merger proposal back in 2007, without any conclusiveness. Orbital forcing should be merged into this article since the article and literature refer to Milankovitch cycles, when discussing orbital forcing, and because OF appears to be written with a NPOV. prokaryotes (talk) 15:19, 1 May 2014 (UTC)

Oppose. Orbital forcing is an observed phenomenon. Any given, well-established theory, such as that proposed by Milankovitch, to explain the phenomenon deserves its own article.101.162.226.77 (talk) 00:59, 13 May 2014 (UTC)
Oppose. I agree with 101.162.226.77.  — TimL • talk 10:20, 18 May 2014 (UTC)
Oppose. Orbital forcing is a process and the Milankovic cycle is its application to Earth history.59.167.237.196 (talk) 23:41, 29 May 2014 (UTC)
— — — — —
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of a WP:PM.

Please do not modify it.
Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on this talk page. No further edits should be made to this section.

GenQuest "Talk to Me" 04:44, 30 May 2014 (UTC)

A copy of this template can be found here.

Effects of precession on the seasons (using the Northern Hemisphere terms).

The picture showing the effects of precession on the seasons (using the Northern Hemisphere terms) is very hard to understand. It's hard to understand which time frames the arrows are pointing to in the future, past and present. Even Malenkovitch explained it in more understandable terms — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2601:540:C001:7708:4E:F3BB:1571:2478 (talk) 08:45, 21 June 2015 (UTC)

"precession of the Earth's orbit resulted"

Precession affects the Earth's axial tilt in its rotation, not its orbit. AndroidCat (talk) 21:42, 12 January 2020 (UTC)

See apsidal precession. GenQuest "Talk to Me" 22:34, 12 January 2020 (UTC)
Fixed it: the confusing part was a list of orbit and rotational effects followed by them all being ascribed only to orbit. Talk to SageGreenRider 03:15, 13 January 2020 (UTC)

Should the large cycles diagram be on top of the article?

On certain display settings (non-fullscreen on desktop computers) this looks visually awkward: One quite narrow column of intro text next to the big, complicated diagram filling most of the browser window.

For all users the questions should be asked: Isn't this too heavy a dose of information to throw into the reader's face, right at the start? I find it easier to stomach if the first thing a reader sees besides text is something he can more easily relate to. Admittedly, the article subject itself is quite abstract; and a photo of a cliff wall that invites the reader to lock for patterns of strata in it is still a lot brainier, than, say, a picture of a cute-looking animal. But seeing the article's concept directly expressed in nature is much more accessible to me than an abstract diagram.

In short: I find that the suggested start of the article (beginning with a photo) is more approachable and accessible than beginning with a complicated diagram. Got reverted on this issue by SageGreenRider previously; opened discussion as requested. ΟΥΤΙΣ (talk) 11:09, 21 June 2020 (UTC)

The article is about the sub- and co-cycles which make up the Malinkovich cycle. The diagram is appropriate. Regards, GenQuest "Talk to Me" 09:11, 22 June 2020 (UTC)
I agree with GenQuest. Let's not bury the lede. Talk to SageGreenRider 21:11, 27 June 2020 (UTC)

The major component of the eccentricity variation is 405,000 years, not 413,000 years

Section 1.1 on Orbital eccentricity states that the "major component of these variations occurs with a period of 413,000 years" but the only cited reference says that this period is 405,000 years. See reference 2:.[1]George Fergus (talk) 16:42, 21 June 2020 (UTC)

  1. ^ Laskar et.al. (2011) "La2010: A New Orbital Solution for the Long-term Motion of the Earth"