Volcanoes Are Part of Global Warming Process
Are Recent Eruptions a Repeat of History?
By Jacques Boulerice, published Apr 29, 2007
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Global warming is on everybody's mind, if not their lips, these days thanks to constant mention in the news and a certain ex-Vice President. Scientists now say that they have found proof from the past that volcanoes helped cause an extended period of rising temperatures which resulted in an era of global warming as it reshaped the Earth's continental outlines and wiped out many animal species.The latest issue of the journal Science carries the story about intense volcanic activity in what is now our planet's northern hemisphere, and especially in Western Europe and Greenland. The scientists involved in the study referred to it as a "planetary emergency" that wiped out between thirty and fifty percent of all marine life at that time. Robert Duncan of Oregon State University was part of that research team, and he revealed that a series of volcanoes erupted in relative tandem off the coast of Greenland and in what is now the western part of the British Isles.
These gigantic geological upheavals are almost certainly what pushed Greenland away from the rest of Europe and helped create the Atlantic Ocean where previously there was only a shallow sea surrounded by a land mass. Duncan explained it by saying "There has been evidence in the marine record of this period of global warming, and evidence in the geologic record of the eruptions at roughly the same time, but until now there has been no direct link between the two".
Those are the key words, "until now". Duncan narrowed the event's inception about 55 million years ago, or roughly ten million years after the claimed disappearance of dinosaurs. The violent eruptions catapulted great quantities of carbon dioxide and methane in the atmosphere, and continued to do so for about 222,000 years. The direct result was an extended warming period that raised sea temperatures near the surface, where most of the marine life forms live, by about nine degrees, which is catastrophic to sea life over a sustained amount of time. During that time, the Arctic probably saw a temperature increase of eleven degrees, and the acidity of sea water also increased.
Volcanoes Are Part of Global Warming Process
Mount St. Helens erupting in 1980. Imagine the impact of a dozen such simultaneous eruptions on global warming.
Credit: Romeo Ranoco
Copyright: U.S. Geological Survey
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Takeaways
- Volcanic activity created the Atlantic Ocean
- Warming period lasted 222,000 years
- About half of all marine species were wiped out
Resources
- Reuters News
- Science journal
- United States Geological Survey
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