Q: Hi!
Oxygen in our atmosphere was created by small creatures who
had just invented a new process:
photosynthesis.
The waste product of photosynthesis is oxygen.
After an unfathomable number of years, too much O2 built up in the
atmosphere, changing the greenhouse gas, methane, into carbon dioxide, which
isn’t such a strong greenhouse gas. This
caused the earth to cool off to the point where the first known ice age began,
the huronic, I think. It lasted for
millions of years and enveloped the entire earth with ice.
Question 1: how did these photosynthetic creatures survive
in an iced-over earth?
Question 2: what caused the end of this very long ice age?
Just curious - Thank
you!
- Susan K
A: Your question suggests you are well along in studying
this topic. I've stored a number of closely related questions and
answers on this blog, and by way of a long answer, some of these may help:
http://askageologist.blogspot.com/2013/07/climate-change-is-it-real.html
http://askageologist.blogspot.com/2013/04/castastrophes-and-mass-extinctions.html
http://askageologist.blogspot.com/2012/06/snowball-earth-faint-young-sun-paradox.html
The medium-length answer: Our atmosphere passed
through the oxygenation transition around 2.5 billion years ago, and it
certainly involved photosynthesis - stromatolites (fossil algal clumps) have been found
dating as far back as 3.3 billion years. However, there are also suggestions that
mantle outgassing, tectonics, and oceanic current-shifts may have contributed.
There really was a Snowball Earth episode, and there have been a series of cold-warm cycles
since then. Scientists have been exploring - with limited data - what could
have caused these events, and suggestions range from the fairly mundane to the
exotic: asteroid impact, tectonic change that interrupted oceanic current
flows, etc. The Chicxulub asteroid event 65 million years ago certainly knocked
the oxygen levels in the atmosphere down dramatically, requiring millions of
years to recover. This is almost certainly why bar-headed geese can easily fly
over Mount Everest: birds have evolved a truly advanced respiratory system since that event.
Evolution is well-documented to speed up under environmental stress.
Some short answers:
1. If there is one thing certain about microbial life, it is
that it can survive almost anything. Microbes have been found kilometers deep
in the Earth, and temperatures steadily increase with depth due to radio-isotope decay in the Mantle and Core of the Earth (the temperature rises to typically 60 C at 4,000 meters depth).
2. There are a lot of variables that may have been involved
in the recurring cool-warming cycles, including the fact that the Sun has
steadily grown in luminosity during its lifetime, as well as tectonics, and
methane-emitting life forms. Likely a combination of these - and probably other
factors - led to out-of-control feedback loops that dead-ended in climate
extremes before the atmosphere eventually recovered.
No comments:
Post a Comment