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The Azolla Event
The Creation of the Modern Earth’s Climate
By Jeff Taylor
Olympus High SchoolGet You High School Diploma Online!
Today’s Rocks Explain The Past’s Climate
Did you know that the Arctic Circle was a warm swamp 50 million years ago?
Then
Now
Ellesmere Island Today• One of the northernmost pieces of land on
Earth• Very cold, very dry, very dark in winter• Winters average high -30° C (-22° F)• Summers average high 6°C (43° F)This is summer where you are lucky if it gets above freezing
Ellesmere Island
50 million years ago
Fossils of Ellesmere Island• On this cold arctic island are preserved stumps
and fossils of an ancient temperate forest, which had a climate similar to South Carolina today!
http://thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=TCE&Params=A1ARTA0010389
But, How Could That Be?
50 Million Years Ago
Today
The Position is Similar
Lomonosov ridge
North Pole
Sometimes different climates can be explained by movement of continents due to plate tectonics. But, in this case, Ellesmere Island is pretty close to where it was 50 million years ago.
So, What’s The Deal?
Hothouse Earth• For over 200 million years, up to and past the extinction of the
dinosaurs, the Earth was much warmer than it is today.• How much warmer? About 8-10° F worldwide average temperature.• That was enough to have forests in Antarctica and tropical jungles in
Seattle. • Carbon Dioxide levels were some 6 times higher than today.
The EoceneAbout 50 Million Years Ago
• Dinosaurs had been extinct for 15 million years• Mammals were becoming the dominant animal on Earth• It was tropical all the way north to the Pacific Northwest• It was temperate all the way to the poles• No ice caps at either poles and no glaciers
Evolution of the WhaleEocene Brought About Remarkable Mammalian Evolution
Some Differences Between Now and Then• With no ice caps, the sea levels were much higher, flooding lower areas• Antarctica was covered in forests and there were no glaciers• India has not yet hit Asia, so the Himalayas could not block moisture.• South America and North America were not connected, so ocean currents could go right
between them and animals could not cross back and forth.• Europe and Africa had not collided, so there were no Alps yet.
But, why so warm?
• CO2 levels were way higher than today (about 6 times). This greenhouse gas captured more solar energy.
• Ocean currents could transport heat better due to the configuration of the continents.
• No ice caps meant no white snow to reflect sunlight back into space.
That isn’t completely understood yet. But, here are some theories and evidence.
So, why did it get cold?Around 47 million years ago, the “Hothouse Earth” ended and within 800,000 years the temperature dropped dramatically.
By 45 million years ago, the temperature began to approach the current conditions.
• CO2 dropped dramatically
• Ice caps formed over Antarctica
• “Icehouse Earth Phase” has begun
“Icehouse Earth”What Could Cause Such a Dramatic Change?
It is currently theorized that a fern caused a dramatic change in Earth’s climate that has continued for the last 47 million years.
Wait a minute….A FERN?
Meet AzollaThis is a tiny little aquatic fern found in swamps and bogs today
Azolla Ecology• Grows in tropical and subtropical regions• Is intolerant to freezing conditions• Can be a pest that will completely cover waterways
Azolla – The “Super Plant”• Azolla has the amazing ability to double its biomass in just 2-3 days.• It can absorb a great deal of carbon dioxide from the air• When it dies, it can form peat layers at the bottom of the lakes• The decomposing masses at the bottom quickly become anoxic
(without oxygen), which prevents future decomposition and preserves the dead materials.
The Azolla EventApproximately 50 million years ago, the Arctic Sea was a semi-closed basin with few ocean currents to mix the waters.
Freshwater flowed in from the land and temperate swamps.
Freshwater is lighter than saltwater and would float on top.
Azolla, being a floating fern, could drift into this ocean and continue to grow on the freshwater surface.
Like The Black Sea TodayDue to its enclosed nature, the Black Sea is the least salty body of seawater connected to an ocean in the world.
The Black Sea is only ½ as salty as the ocean.
It is only habitable in the top 10% because the bottom 90% lacks oxygen.
The bottom is anoxic, because there is little mixing to bring surface oxygen to the bottom.
The bottom is much saltier than the top, since saltwater sinks.
Azolla EventWith Azolla doubling its mass every few days, it sucked up huge amounts of Carbon Dioxide from the atmosphere.
As layer upon layer of this “superplant” died and sank to the bottom, thick deposits of organic material formed on the sea floor.
This permanently stored the CO2 under the ocean.
Lower levels of this greenhouse gas meant less solar energy captured and reduced temperatures.
Within 800,000 years, the CO2 levels had dropped from 3500 ppm to 650 ppm and ice caps began to form on the poles.
Just like that, the Azolla could not grow in this region anymore, but the “damage” was done.
Coal Seam
Carbon DioxideAre we inching back up to a Hothouse Earth?
When we burn fossil fuels like coal, oil, and natural gas, we are taking the CO2 that was removed from the air by plants millions of years ago and are returning to back to the atmosphere.
Relationship Between CO2 and TemperatureBefore 1800, we were essentially “carbon neutral”. That is because CO2 came from sources that absorbed it like plants and wood.
But, with the Industrial Revolution, we really started pumping extra CO2 from burning coal and then oil to power industry and transportation
Azolla Deposits Means Money?• Much of the current energy exploration in the Arctic is to gain access to
these ancient Azolla deposits.• Of course, that would mean releasing that ancient stored carbon back into
the air when it is burned.• The ironic thing is that global warming actually makes it easier to access
these deposits, because the sea ice will melt faster.