Greenhouse Ocean Study Offers Warning For Future

Mass extinction of marine life in our oceans during prehistoric times is a warning that the same could happen again

May 19, 2011 RSS Feed Print
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The mass extinction of marine life in our oceans during prehistoric times is a warning that the same could happen again due to high levels of greenhouse gases, according to new research.

Professor Martin Kennedy from the University of Adelaide (School of Earth & Environmental Sciences) and Professor Thomas Wagner from Newcastle University, UK, (Civil Engineering and Geosciences) have been studying 'greenhouse oceans'—those that have been depleted of oxygen, suffering increases in carbon dioxide and temperature.

Using core samples drilled from the ocean bed off the coast of western Africa, the geologists studied layers of sediment from the Late Cretaceous Period (85 million years ago) across a 400,000-year timespan. They found a significant amount of organic material—marine life—buried within deoxygenated layers of the sediment.

Professor Wagner says the results of their research, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), has relevance for our modern world: "We know that 'dead zones' are rapidly growing in size and number in seas and oceans across the globe," he said. "These are areas of water that are lacking in oxygen and are suffering from increases of CO2, rising temperatures, nutrient run-off from agriculture and other factors."

Their research points to a mass mortality in the oceans at a time when the Earth was going through a greenhouse effect. High levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and rising temperatures led to a severe lack of oxygen (hypoxia) in the water that marine animals depend upon.

"What's alarming to us as scientists is that there were only very slight natural changes that resulted in the onset of hypoxia in the deep ocean," said Professor Kennedy. "This occurred relatively rapidly—in periods of hundreds of years, or possibly even less—not gradually over longer, geological time scales, suggesting that the Earth's oceans are in a much more delicate balance during greenhouse conditions than originally thought, and may respond in a more abrupt fashion to even subtle changes in temperature and CO2 levels."

Professor Kennedy said that the doubling of the amount of carbon dioxide in our atmosphere over the past 50 years is "like hitting our ecosystem with a sledge-hammer" compared to the very small changes in incoming solar energy (radiation) which was capable of triggering these events in the past.

"This could have a catastrophic, profound impact on the sustainability of life in our oceans, which in turn is likely to impact on the sustainability of life for many land-based species, including humankind," he added.

However, the geological record offers a glimmer of hope thanks to a naturally occurring response to greenhouse conditions. After a hypoxic phase, oxygen concentration in the ocean seems to improve, and marine life returns.

This research has shown that natural processes of carbon burial kick in and the land comes to the rescue, with soil-formed minerals collecting and burying excess dissolved organic matter in seawater. Burial of the excess carbon ultimately contributes to CO2 removal from the atmosphere, cooling the planet and the ocean.

"This is nature's solution to the greenhouse effect and it could offer a possible solution for us," said Professor Wagner. "If we are able to learn more about this effect and its feedbacks, we may be able to manage it, and reduce the present rate of warming threatening our oceans."

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Tags:
oceans,
greenhouse gases,
global warming,
environment

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Then click on: Temperatures past 420'000 years. You see that in the last 420'000 years we had 5 global warnings of about 10'000 years and 4 global cooling of about 100'000 years! The Earth is oscillating every 110'000 years between most Teraton C in form of CO2 into the atmosphere ( Global warming: -330'000, -240'000, -130'000, now) and most Teraton C in form of methane hydrate+calcium carbonate on the ocean floors (Glaciations: -340'000, -250'000, -140'000, -10'000 before Jesus Christ)

You see that our planet temperature is now 3 celsius below the last maximum from -130'000 years before Jesus Christ. And you also see that we could soon start the next 100'000 years of global cooling, that will bring us to the next earth glaciation, in +100'000 after Jesus Christ!

What will happens the next 110'000 years?

For creating 7 billions peoples (=0.35 Gigaton humans), many Gigaton seafood has been eaten. So there are now less fishes in the oceans. Less seafood eat less phytoplankton. So there are now more phytoplankton in the oceans. More phytoplankton is reducing more CO2 into sugars and oils. More phytoplankton dies, fall on the ocean floors, and decompose into methane and calcium carbonates. But the methane does not bubble up: it freeze the cool ocean water into solid methane hydrate, stable under 15 centigrade under high pressures! Google in pictures: methane hydrate, then click on the blue world map "Energy from ice": you see that we have now 3'000 billions tons of carbon, fixed in methane hydrate! (3 Teraton C in methane)! Compare it with less 1 Teraton C of known (Natural gas +crude oil +coal)!

Now our 7 billions peoples are sending more and more fertilizer into the oceans. This will make the phytoplankton proliferate. This will change the albedo of our dark blue planet into a less dark yellow-green phytoplankton planet. This will make our planet absorbing less heat from the sun. And also much more phytoplankton will finally reduce the excess of CO2 into our atmosphere, transforming it into methane hydrate and calcium carbonate down the oceans floors. So our yellow green planet will cool down. And, 100'000 years after Jesus Christ, we will have the next glaciation, with many km of ice accumulating on all continents, and all ocean level will drop 1 km. This will make the ocean water more salty, as in the dead see. This will kill many fishes, creating more methane hydrates on the ocean floors. Finally, the ocean water will be so dense, 100'000 years after Jesus Christ, that, with the first really big earthquake, all the methane hydrate, less dense then the now salt saturated water, will suddenly rise up from ocean floors to ocean surface, where it will float, and then it will melt. So Teraton of methane will flow into the earth atmosphere. And so the next global warming will suddenly begin, for the next 10'000 years, melting more and more methane hydrate from the ocean floor! Until 110'000 years after Jesus christ!

Jean-Francois Morf, Charrat, Switzerland 5:17PM May 20, 2011

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