From the National Science Foundation, another bit of Speculative Science™ note the caveat in bold, which is all they need for a headline that screams certainty:
This sudden release of gases into the atmosphere may have created intense global warming, and acidification of the oceans, which ultimately killed off thousands of plant and animal species.
See below for the alternate scenario based on the same press release.
Press Release 13-046
Before Dinosaurs’ Era, Volcanic Eruptions Triggered Mass Extinction
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Increase in atmospheric carbon dioxide, global warming, ocean acidification killed 76 percent of species on Earth
Back to the future? Ancient rocks in Hartford Basin, Conn., offer a look into geologic time.
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March 21, 2013
More than 200 million years ago, a massive extinction decimated 76 percent of marine and terrestrial species, marking the end of the Triassic period and the onset of the Jurassic.
The event cleared the way for dinosaurs to dominate Earth for the next 135 million years, taking over ecological niches formerly occupied by other marine and terrestrial species.
It’s not clear what caused the end-Triassic extinction, although most scientists agree on a likely scenario.
Over a relatively short time period, massive volcanic eruptions from a large region known as the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province (CAMP) spewed forth huge amounts of lava and gas, including carbon dioxide, sulfur and methane.
This sudden release of gases into the atmosphere may have created intense global warming, and acidification of the oceans, which ultimately killed off thousands of plant and animal species.
Now, researchers at MIT, Columbia University and other institutions have determined that these eruptions occurred precisely when the extinction began, providing strong evidence that volcanic activity did indeed trigger the end-Triassic extinction.
Results of the research, funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF), are published this week in the journal Science.
“These scientists have come close to confirming something we had only guessed at: that the mass extinction of this ancient time was indeed related to a series of volcanic eruptions,” says Lisa Boush, program director in NSF’s Division of Earth Sciences.
“The effort is also the result of the EARTHTIME initiative, an NSF-sponsored project that’s developing an improved geologic time scale for scientists to interpret Earth’s history.”
The scientists determined the age of basaltic lavas and other features found along the East Coast of the United States, as well as in Morocco–now-disparate regions that, 200 million years ago, were part of the supercontinent Pangaea.
The rift that ultimately separated these landmasses was also the site of CAMP’s volcanic activity.
Today, the geology of both regions includes igneous rocks from the CAMP eruptions as well as sedimentary rocks that accumulated in an enormous lake. The researchers used a combination of techniques to date the rocks and to pinpoint CAMP’s beginning and duration.
From its measurements, they reconstructed the region’s volcanic activity 201 million years ago, discovering that the eruption of magma–along with carbon dioxide, sulfur and methane–occurred in repeated bursts over a period of 40,000 years, a short span in geologic time.
“This extinction happened at a geological instant in time,” says Sam Bowring, a geologist at MIT. “There’s no question the extinction occurred at the same time as the first eruption.”
In addition to Bowring, the paper’s co-authors are Terrence Blackburn and Noah McLean of MIT; Paul Olsen and Dennis Kent of Columbia; John Puffer of Rutgers University; Greg McHone, an independent researcher from New Brunswick, N.J.; E. Troy Rasbury of Stony Brook University; and Mohammed Et-Touhami of the Université Mohammed Premier (Mohammed Premier University) Oujda, Morocco.
Blackburn is the paper’s lead author.
More than a coincidence
The end-Triassic extinction is one of five major mass extinctions in the last 540 million years of Earth’s history.
For several of these events, scientists have noted that large igneous provinces, which provide evidence of widespread volcanic activity, arose at about the same time.
But, as Bowring points out, “just because they happen to approximately coincide doesn’t mean there’s cause and effect.”
For example, while massive lava flows overlapped with the extinction that wiped out the dinosaurs, scientists have linked that extinction to an asteroid collision.
“If you want to make the case that an eruption caused an extinction, you have to be able to show at the highest possible precision that the eruption and the extinction occurred at exactly the same time,” Bowring says.
For the time of the end-Triassic, Bowring says that researchers have dated volcanic activity to right around the time fossils disappear from the geologic record, providing evidence that CAMP may have triggered the extinction.
But these estimates have a margin of error of one to two million years. “A million years is forever when you’re trying to make that link,” Bowring says.
For example, it’s thought that CAMP emitted a total of more than two million cubic kilometers of lava.
If that amount of lava were spewed over a period of one to two million years, it wouldn’t have the same effect as if it were emitted over tens of thousands of years.
“The timescale over which the eruption occurred has a big effect,” Bowring says.
Tilting toward extinction
To determine how long the volcanic eruptions lasted, the group combined two dating techniques: astrochronology and geochronology.
The former is a technique that links sedimentary layers in rocks to changes in the tilt of the Earth.
For decades, scientists have observed that the Earth’s orientation changes in regular cycles as a result of gravitational forces exerted by neighboring planets.
The Earth’s axis tilts at regular cycles, returning to its original tilt every 26,000 years. Such orbital variations change the amount of solar radiation reaching the Earth’s surface, which in turn has an effect on the planet’s climate, known as Milankovich cycles.
This cyclical change in climate can be seen in the types of sediments deposited in the Earth’s crust.
Scientists can determine a rock’s age by first identifying cyclical variations in deposition of sediments in quiet bodies of water, such as deep oceans or large lakes.
A cycle of sediment corresponds with a cycle of the Earth’s tilt, established as a known period of years.
By seeing where a rock lies in those sedimentary layers, scientists can get a good idea of how old it is. To obtain precise estimates, researchers have developed mathematical models to determine the Earth’s tilt over millions of years.
Bowring says the technique is good for directly dating rocks up to 35 million years old, but beyond that, it’s unclear how reliable the technique is.
He and colleagues used astrochronology to estimate the age of the sedimentary rocks, then tested those estimates against high-precision dates from 200-million-year-old rocks in North America and Morocco.
The geologists broke apart rock samples to isolate tiny crystals known as zircons, which they analyzed to determine the ratio of uranium to lead.
The technique enabled the team to date the rocks to within approximately 30,000 years–a precise measurement in geologic terms.
Taken together, the geochronology and astrochronology techniques gave the geologists precise estimates for the onset of volcanism 200 million years ago.
The techniques revealed three bursts of magmatic activity over 40,000 years–a short period of time during which massive amounts of carbon dioxide and other gas emissions may have drastically altered Earth’s climate.
While the evidence is the strongest thus far for linking volcanic activity with the end-Triassic extinction, Bowring says that more work can be done.
“The CAMP province extends from Nova Scotia all the way to Brazil and West Africa,” he says. “I’m dying to know whether those are exactly the same age.”
-NSF-
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I can play this game, using their paragraph:
This sudden release of gases into the atmosphere may have created intense global warming, and acidification of the oceans, which ultimately killed off thousands of plant and animal species.
Change a couple of words, and we have a whole new plausible scenario:
This sudden release of ash, soot, and stratospheric aerosols (like SO2) into the atmosphere may have created intense global cooling, due to blocked sunlight, which ultimately killed off thousands of plant and animal species.
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Back to the future? Ancient rocks in Hartford Basin, Conn., offer a look into geologic time.
Precautionary principle! Precautionary principle! The sky is falling! (Maybe)
Jurassic Pork
Anybody remember Carl Sagan (AKA “Butthead Astronomer) and his “nuclear winter” scare?
It’s funny that if we got some huge volcanoes going off then Warmists would blame that for any temperature downturn, yet I read volcanoes may have led to intense global warming. How does it warm when far less of the Sun’s rays get through? I’m just not getting this at all.
Let’s see if James Hansen can help me out here.
“This sudden release of gases into the atmosphere may have created intense global warming, and acidification of the oceans, which ultimately killed off thousands of plant and animal species.”
An alien space craft may have landed in Roswell NM in 1947.
Big foot may have kidnapped Jimmy Hoffa.
Elvis may have been kidnapped by aliens
Michel Jackson may have been an alien.
This is a fun game.
They kind of miss the obvious – which is the question that with an increasing CO2 level in the atmosphere (all our fault, of course /sarc), why are we still in a period of ice ages?
Ran across an post on Volcanocafe last year that suggests that the hot spot responsible for the Siberian Traps (250 MY ago) is still active and sits underneath Iceland today. Volumes of material are impressive. Note that the Permian – Triassic extinction event was around 50 MY before the event being talked about in this.
https://volcanocafe.wordpress.com/2012/07/16/the-icelandic-hotspot-hypervolcano-why-old-traps-wont-erupt-again/comment-page-1/
Cheers –
Interesting.
But, just why did those volcanoes erupt?
Conjecture:
If one hypothesizes that the volcanic eruptions that seem to be coincident with the Chicxulub meteor event were in fact caused by the meteor one could have an interesting theory:
huge meteor impacts cause a “ringing of the bell” of planet earth with the momentum causing eruptions on the opposite side.
Think Hawaiian hot spot, Yellowstone, breakup of Pangea, Siberian Traps, etc caused by, now lost, hits or opposite side from a hit, by a huge object.
Iceland volcano’s eruption fueled ocean blooms
http://science.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/03/22/17416560-iceland-volcanos-eruption-fueled-ocean-blooms?lite
There was a time when “may have” were the words of somebody trying to make interesting hypothesis.
Now “may have” is a free letter to rain any carbonatsis nonsense on the poor reader, doesn’t matter how absurd the case is.
In any case one think is sure: the extinction was not caused by global warming caused by CO2. There have been huge ppm CO2 in the atmosphere at the time:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Phanerozoic_Carbon_Dioxide.png
A doubling of the CO2 from 5000 ppm to 10000 ppm would have changed the global temperature with about 1°C if this sensibility is proved right. No danger of extinctions due to this? From 2500 pmm to 5000 ppm the same? So what global warming?
Thinking at the cooling that accompanies volcanic eruptions – as correctly mentioned in the article – due to the aerosols, one asks himself what cool-aid have these guys drank or maybe they smoked it?
I remember a book I read as a child (ca. 10 years old, a long time ago)
about the geologic eras. This book used the image of a geologic time clock
dividing eras. I was particularly struck by the phrasing the authors used for
describing the upsurge in volcanic activity at the boundary between the
Permian and the Triassic:
Theo Goodwin says:
March 22, 2013 at 10:45 am
The NSF is rebranding itself as the NSDF, the National Science Drama Foundation….
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
I thought those new intitials stood for the Non-Scientific Dramatic Fanatics
This study has zip, nada, to do with CAGW.
It is plausible, although far from certain. Trilobites DID go extinct after a great almost 400 million year run. So something bad happened then, and the breakup of Pangea was BAD. But maybe not causative.
You diminish your excellent arguments about the present by denigrating altogether other possible arguments about the distant past. I would have hoped better from the so called scientiific skeptic denizens of this important blog.
Regards from a lukewarmist agnostic, who only goes where real data leads independent of personal, political, or religious inclinations. And who is perfectly willing to call out fellow travelers based on sound underlying principals. As regrettably now.
@Theo – are you sure you don’t mean the NSDAP “National Socialist Delusional Asinine People”? Of course those initials also stand for another organization of similar repute.
Jimbo, Susan Corwin – I’m with you. Next you know man’s CO2 emissions TODAY will be blamed for the Permian and Triassic extinctions – and probably for the chicxulub event as well.
They key here is what they mean by ‘sudden’ and ‘rapid’. 40,000 years or so is not a big deal geologically, but in human terms it is.
I have no issue with the correlation between large igneous provinces and mass extinctions, as there does seem to be a good correlation, but if it takes 40,000 years of large eruptions to make a good mass extinction, it just confirms that we don’t need to worry about puny human emissions over the scale of hundreds of years.
Rud Istvan says (March 22, 2013 at 3:21 pm)
This study has zip, nada, to do with CAGW.
———
As extracted in a T&N comment I made earlier, perhaps someone should tell the scientists and media:-
“New rock dating techniques have helped narrow the timeframe of a chain of massive volcanic eruptions that wiped out half the world’s species 200 million years ago, a study said Thursday.”
“They may offer a historic parallel to the human-caused climate change happening today, by showing how sharp increases in carbon dioxide can outpace vulnerable species’ ability to adapt, researchers said.”
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/ancient-megavolcanoes-killed-half-worlds-species-181230077.html#FQbEczx
Once again I would like to point out that “decimated” means to cut by 10%. It does not mean devastated, it does not mean destroyed, it means “dec…”, as in decimal or decade, decimeter and December if Julius and Augustus didn’t stick their names in there.
Mat Ridley even made this mistake in that video recently.
First: Anthony’s cooling fits with what we observe after big eruptions.
Second: nobody seems to have picked up on the simultaneous emission of carbon dioxide and methane. I have not found a source including methane in volcanic emissions. I suggest that if a globally significant volume of methane at 1000 degrees celcius was released into the atmoshere,
better run! Check out research into converting methane into methanol; violent explosion is the main problem. These guys seem to have simply grabbed a rag bag of green house gases without any thought.
Finally and pedantically: “decimated 75%” is an oxymoron. “Destroy” any percentage you like but if you are into decimation you are restricted to 10% no more and no less. It’s a punishment!
I have to agree with Anthony. IF volcanic activity was the root cause of all those extinctions, it is far more likely that the mechanism was soot, ash, intense cooling and a shut-down of the plant cycle, leading to massive starvation of the animal populations, than any warming scenario. The “year without a summer” is, after all, the pattern that we’ve seen (admittedly, to a lesser extent) in the aftermath of massive volcanic eruptions during the human-historical record.
garymount says:
March 22, 2013 at 4:59 pm
You are arguing correct usage against popular usage. Correct usage almost never wins.
Massive eruptions tend to COOL the planet, not warm it up.
The massive amounts of SO2 pumped into the atmosphere mixes with H2O to form H2SO4 (sulfuric acid), which greatly increases the cloud albedo effect and lowers ocean pH. Tropospheric/stratospheric volcanic particulates also increase Earth’s albedo and starves plants of sunlight leading to plant/animal extinctions.
Grant whores’ fixation with CO2 “related” “research” skews so many “scientific” conclusions rendering the research useless.
I’ll be ecstatic when the CAGW hoax is finally dead and buried so the scientific community can get back to conducting REAL science rather than chasing/wasting $billions of taxpayer money on bogus political agendas.
Decimate has two senses. Sense 2 Eliminate, annihilate, extinguish, eradicate, wipe out, decimate, carry off — (kill in large numbers…(usage)) Wordnet 3.0.
Also
Sense 1 To destroy or kill a large portion of. Britannica World Language edition of Funk and Wagnalls Standard Dictionary.
I am just so sorry to have speak to you today.
“May Have” is a definite and probably never.
And the USA citizens payed and died for this.
Sad.
Theo Goodwin says:
March 22, 2013 at 6:46 pm
I, for one, would far rather be correct than popular.
Egad, has anyone looked at the varying models of astronomical “forcing” for the Pleistocene? And they want to project this mess back 100x?
Folks need to make more wine. It teaches about the “dioxides”, Carbon and Sulfur. Take a deep breath of CO2 from a fermenting must and you feel good, kind of the buzz you get from “carbonated” beverages. An equal whiff of SO2 would put you in anaphylactic shock. It is used because it kills bloody EVERYTHING.
Current volcanoes differ considerably in the proportions of CO2 and SO2 emitted. Current research is fixated on SO2 as a condensation nucleus. I’d love to give those guys a whiff of my stock sulfite solution.