Researchers at the University of Leicester are exploring what
they consider a more "down to earth" reason for some of the
previous mass extinction events in the planet's history.
Although large scale asteroid or meteorite strikes are given
for some of the past events, others are not as clear cut,
there are several that happened, yet no corresponding large
impact craters from the same time period have been found.
What has been found is huge outpourings of lava,
basalt fields, with associated outgassing of sulphur dioxide,
CO2 and water vapor. Given the sheer scale of these past slow
scale volcanic eruptions, such as in the Siberian
"traps", the researchers theorize that it was
enough to tip the atmospheric balance into the
"unsustainable" range for most life at the time and help
bring about the extinction event.
"Earth history has been punctuated by several mass
extinctions rapidly wiping out nearly all life forms on our
planet. What causes these catastrophic events? Are they
really due to meteorite impacts? Current research suggests
that the cause may come from within our own planet – the
eruption of vast amounts of lava that brings a cocktail of
gases from deep inside the Earth and vents them into the
atmosphere.
University of Leicester geologists,
Professor Andy Saunders and Dr Marc
Reichow, are taking a fresh look at what may
actually have wiped out the dinosaurs 65 million years ago
and caused other similarly cataclysmic events, aware they may
end up exploding a few popular myths.
The idea that meteorite impacts caused mass extinctions has
been in vogue over the last 25 years, since Louis Alverez’s
research team in Berkeley, California published their work
about an extraterrestrial iridium anomaly found in
65-million-year-old layers at the Cretaceous-Tertiary
boundary. This anomaly only could be explained by an
extraterrestrial source, a large meteorite, hitting the Earth
and ultimately wiping the dinosaurs – and many other
organisms - off the Earth’s surface.
Professor Saunders commented: “Impacts are suitably
apocalyptic. They are the stuff of Hollywood. It seems that
every kid’s dinosaur book ends with a bang. But are they the
real killers and are they solely responsible for every mass
extinction on earth? There is scant evidence of impacts at
the time of other major extinctions e.g., at the end of the
Permian, 250 million years ago, and at the end of the
Triassic, 200 million years ago. The evidence that has been
found does not seem large enough to have triggered an
extinction at these times.”
Flood basalt eruptions are – he says - an
alternative kill mechanism. These do correspond with
all main mass extinctions, within error of the techniques
used to determine the age of the volcanism. Furthermore, they
may have released enough greenhouse gases (SO2 and
CO2) to dramatically change the climate. The
largest flood basalts on Earth (Siberian Traps and Deccan
Traps) coincide with the largest extinctions (end-Permian,
and end-Cretaceous). “Pure coincidence?”, ask Saunders and
Reichow.
While this is unlikely to be pure chance, the Leicester
researchers are interested in precisely what the kill
mechanism may be. One possibility is that the gases released
by volcanic activity lead to a prolonged volcanic winter
induced by sulphur-rich aerosols, followed by a period of
CO2-induced warming.
Professor Andy Saunders and Dr. Marc Reichow at Leicester, in
collaboration with Anthony Cohen, Steve Self, and Mike
Widdowson at the Open University, have recently been
awarded a NERC (Natural Environment Research Council)
grant to study the Siberian Traps and their
environmental impact.
The Siberian Traps are the largest known
continental flood basalt province. Erupted about 250 million
years ago at high latitude in the northern hemisphere, they
are one of many known flood basalts provinces - vast
outpourings of lava that covered large areas of the Earth's
surface. A major debate is underway concerning the origin of
these provinces – including the Siberian Traps - and their
environmental impact.
Using radiometric dating techniques, they hope to constrain
the age and, combined with geochemical analysis, the extent,
of the Siberian Traps. Measuring how much gas was released
during these eruptions 250 million years ago is a
considerable challenge. The researchers will study
microscopic inclusions trapped in minerals of the Siberian
Traps rocks to estimate the original gas contents. Using
these data they hope to be able to assess the amount of
SO2 and CO2 released into the
atmosphere 250 million years ago, and whether or not this
caused climatic havoc, wiping out nearly all life on earth.
By studying the composition of sedimentary rocks laid down at
the time of the mass extinction, they also hope to detect
changes to seawater chemistry that resulted from major
changes in climate.
From these data Professor Saunders and his
team hope to link the volcanism to the extinction event. He
explained: “If we can show, for example, that the full extent
of the Siberian Traps was erupted at the same time, we can be
confident that their environmental effects were powerful.
Understanding the actual kill mechanism is the next
stage….watch this space.”
Over at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History's website, they point out that the rate of reported cases of volcanic activity has been steadily increasing over the past few centuries, but then normalize the graph to come to the conclusion that this is due to better reporting/communication, that the rate has been constant Meanwhile, there's an amount of sulphur dioxide in the atmosphere for which the source is thus far unaccounted for.....
Previous Mass Extinctions-it Came from Below
Researchers at the University of Leicester are exploring what they consider a more "down to earth" reason for some of the previous mass extinction events in the planet's history. Although large scale asteroid or meteorite strikes are given for some of the past events, others are not as clear cut, there are several that happened, yet no corresponding large impact craters from the same time period have been found. What has been found is huge outpourings of lava, basalt fields, with associated outgassing of sulphur dioxide, CO2 and water vapor. Given the sheer scale of these past slow scale volcanic eruptions, such as in the Siberian "traps", the researchers theorize that it was enough to tip the atmospheric balance into the "unsustainable" range for most life at the time and help bring about the extinction event.
"Earth history has been punctuated by several mass extinctions rapidly wiping out nearly all life forms on our planet. What causes these catastrophic events? Are they really due to meteorite impacts? Current research suggests that the cause may come from within our own planet – the eruption of vast amounts of lava that brings a cocktail of gases from deep inside the Earth and vents them into the atmosphere.
University of Leicester geologists, Professor Andy Saunders and Dr Marc Reichow, are taking a fresh look at what may actually have wiped out the dinosaurs 65 million years ago and caused other similarly cataclysmic events, aware they may end up exploding a few popular myths.
The idea that meteorite impacts caused mass extinctions has been in vogue over the last 25 years, since Louis Alverez’s research team in Berkeley, California published their work about an extraterrestrial iridium anomaly found in 65-million-year-old layers at the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary. This anomaly only could be explained by an extraterrestrial source, a large meteorite, hitting the Earth and ultimately wiping the dinosaurs – and many other organisms - off the Earth’s surface.
Professor Saunders commented: “Impacts are suitably apocalyptic. They are the stuff of Hollywood. It seems that every kid’s dinosaur book ends with a bang. But are they the real killers and are they solely responsible for every mass extinction on earth? There is scant evidence of impacts at the time of other major extinctions e.g., at the end of the Permian, 250 million years ago, and at the end of the Triassic, 200 million years ago. The evidence that has been found does not seem large enough to have triggered an extinction at these times.”
Flood basalt eruptions are – he says - an alternative kill mechanism. These do correspond with all main mass extinctions, within error of the techniques used to determine the age of the volcanism. Furthermore, they may have released enough greenhouse gases (SO2 and CO2) to dramatically change the climate. The largest flood basalts on Earth (Siberian Traps and Deccan Traps) coincide with the largest extinctions (end-Permian, and end-Cretaceous). “Pure coincidence?”, ask Saunders and Reichow.
While this is unlikely to be pure chance, the Leicester researchers are interested in precisely what the kill mechanism may be. One possibility is that the gases released by volcanic activity lead to a prolonged volcanic winter induced by sulphur-rich aerosols, followed by a period of CO2-induced warming.
Professor Andy Saunders and Dr. Marc Reichow at Leicester, in collaboration with Anthony Cohen, Steve Self, and Mike Widdowson at the Open University, have recently been awarded a NERC (Natural Environment Research Council) grant to study the Siberian Traps and their environmental impact.
The Siberian Traps are the largest known continental flood basalt province. Erupted about 250 million years ago at high latitude in the northern hemisphere, they are one of many known flood basalts provinces - vast outpourings of lava that covered large areas of the Earth's surface. A major debate is underway concerning the origin of these provinces – including the Siberian Traps - and their environmental impact.
Using radiometric dating techniques, they hope to constrain the age and, combined with geochemical analysis, the extent, of the Siberian Traps. Measuring how much gas was released during these eruptions 250 million years ago is a considerable challenge. The researchers will study microscopic inclusions trapped in minerals of the Siberian Traps rocks to estimate the original gas contents. Using these data they hope to be able to assess the amount of SO2 and CO2 released into the atmosphere 250 million years ago, and whether or not this caused climatic havoc, wiping out nearly all life on earth. By studying the composition of sedimentary rocks laid down at the time of the mass extinction, they also hope to detect changes to seawater chemistry that resulted from major changes in climate.
From these data Professor Saunders and his team hope to link the volcanism to the extinction event. He explained: “If we can show, for example, that the full extent of the Siberian Traps was erupted at the same time, we can be confident that their environmental effects were powerful. Understanding the actual kill mechanism is the next stage….watch this space.”
Siberian Traps Research page