He places the Younger Dryas in a five-million-year context, noting that few global change events in that entire span match or exceed its severity. The geomorphic reshaping, the redistribution of polar elements, the changes to the biome, all point to something extraordinary. Within that window, he identifies the Hemphillian event as a comparable magnitude shift, but he also notes a series of spikes between glacial and interglacial periods that approach that same level of intensity. What makes these transitions remarkable is their speed: in some cases, the shift occurs within a few years.
He does not claim to have a complete answer for what drives these rapid oscillations, but he lays out the likely suspects. Solar forcing almost certainly plays a role. Impacts from extraterrestrial objects are another factor. And he suspects a terrestrial response from within the Earth itself, a feedback mechanism triggered by external forcing. The picture he sketches is one of a dynamic system where cosmic, solar, and planetary processes converge to produce catastrophic change on timescales far shorter than gradualist models would predict.