Skip to Content
Advertisement
Environment

The Rise of the Ancient Bogs

It was driven by the wind, and could tell us about the future of the climate

The Petersburg muskeg (Peat Bog) with clouds skirting the mountains behind, Alaska, USA. Credit: dvlcom – www.dvlcom.co.uk / Shutterstock.

Bogs go by many names: mires, mosses, quagmires, muskegs, fens. That lingual diversity reflects their varied influence on the collective imagination and on the planet. Associated with mystery and intrigue and people living on the edge, bogs are generally found on almost every continent of Earth, across a wide range of climates, from the Arctic to the tropics.

Featured Video

But there was a time when bogs were less plentiful. Now scientists have learned that the rise of these spongy wetlands—primarily composed of sphagnum moss and accumulated organic plant matter known as peat—may have been inspired by the blowing of strong winds. Known as the Southern Westerlies, these winds blow from west to east across the Southern Hemisphere, through southern Chile and Patagonia, New Zealand, Tasmania and the Falkland Islands. And they’re shifting again now, which could tell us something about where Earth’s climate is headed. The scientists published their findings in Nature Geoscience.

“We found a clear pattern,” said Zoe Thomas, lead author from the University of Southampton, in a statement. “Major peat growth occurred at the same time the winds shifted north or south.” Those shifts in Southern Westerlies, which influence weather patterns and ocean currents, also coincided with changing atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide, suggesting that bogs may serve as natural climate time stamps.

Read more: “The Trouble with the Swamp

Advertisement

The team of scientists radiocarbon dated the bottom layers of peat in bogs found in the Falkland Islands, off Argentina, and compared those data with the ages of peat taken from Patagonia, New Zealand, Tasmania, and sub-Antarctic islands. What they found was that bogs began to form at different times in different latitudes.

About 21,000 years ago, after the last glacial maximum, when ice sheets were at their greatest extent, peatlands began to rise across the Southern mid-latitudes. Then, during a 2,000-year-old cold snap known as the Antarctic Cold Reversal, between 14,700 and 13,000 years ago, peatlands suddenly started to form further north. When that cold snap was over, they moved south again. These changes in climate and in peat growth coincided with changes in the Southern Westerlies.

Read more: “We Need to Talk About Peat

The winds are shifting again, but this time they’re headed toward the South Pole. If this pattern continues, it could compromise the ocean’s ability to act as a carbon sink. The shift has already played a part in increasingly frequent droughts and wildfires across the southern hemisphere.

Advertisement

As these winds wander, bogs offer a quiet record of where our climate may be going next.

Enjoying  Nautilus? Subscribe to our free newsletter.

Lead image: dvlcom - www.dvlcom.co.uk / Shutterstock

Advertisement

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Environment

Explore Environment

The Ancient Cold Snaps That May Have Shaped Human Evolution

Here’s when Earth’s climate became chaotic

February 24, 2026

Is a Strictly Enforced Fishing Ban Saving the Yangtze?

Ecologists detect promising, early signs of river recovery

February 19, 2026

The Long, Dirty History of Our Capitol’s Waters

The recent Potomac River disaster follows centuries of pollution—but things are looking up

February 18, 2026

The Tourist Draw of Melting Glaciers

Glacier tourism tends to do more harm than good, and when the glaciers are gone, local economies will have to adapt

February 13, 2026

How This Delicious Fruit Hampers Reforestation in Madagascar

It nourishes endangered lemurs while destroying their habitats

February 12, 2026

The Long History and Uncertain Future of US Weather Forecasts

Centuries of scientific progress are at stake

February 9, 2026