Moaning Cavern. This limestone cave is big enough to hold the Statue of Liberty. Dripping Calcium Carbonate likely created this huge chocolaty mound in Moaning Cavern. This Calcium Carbonate solution has also helped to preserve the bodies of prehistoric humans and animals that have fallen into the 165 foot main cavern over thousands of years. NPOD(University of California – Davis) California experienced centuries-long droughts in the past 20,000 years that coincided with the thawing of ice caps in the Arctic, according to a new study by UC Davis doctoral student Jessica Oster and geology professor Isabel Montañez.

The finding, which comes from analyzing stalagmites from Moaning Cavern in the central Sierra Nevada, was published online Nov. 5 in the journal Earth and Planetary Science Letters. The sometimes spectacular mineral formations in caves such as Moaning Cavern and Black Chasm build up over centuries as water drips from the cave roof. Those drops of water pick up trace chemicals in their path through air, soil and rocks, and deposit the chemicals in the stalagmite. “They’re like tree rings made out of rock,” Montañez said. “These are the only climate records of this type for California for this period when past global warming was occurring.” At the end of the last ice age about 15,000 years ago, climate records from Greenland show a warm period called the Bolling-Allerod period. Oster and Montanez’s results show that at the same time, California became much drier. Episodes of relative cooling in the Arctic records, including the Younger Dryas period 13,000 years ago, were accompanied by wetter periods in California. … “If there is a connection to Arctic sea ice then there are big implications for us in California,” Montañez said. Arctic sea ice has declined by about 3 percent a year over the past three decades, and some forecasts predict an ice-free Arctic ocean as soon as 2020. …

Cave study links climate change to California droughts