Space Travel News  
Thaw point: 'Snowball Earth' was more a slushball

by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) Dec 5, 2007
An extraordinary episode of global cooling hundreds of millions of years ago that some experts say caused Earth to completely freeze over has been miscalculated, a new study says.

Instead of "Snowball Earth," the planet really became "Slushball Earth," its authors suggest.

The great chill -- the longest and deepest ice age in Earth's known history -- happened during the late Neoproterozoic era, 850 to 542 million years ago.

The evidence for the Snowball thesis comes from deep sediments in the ocean.

Scientists look through these layers to measure levels of the isotope carbon 13 (C13), deposited in plants through photosynthesis, as a telltale of Earth's climate.

Above and below the Cryogenian layer is an abundance of C13. But the Cryogenian layer itself has negligible levels of this isotope.

Coupled with other signs of intense glaciation, the explanation is that Earth froze over completely -- thick ice covered the oceans and glaciers crept down into the tropics, possibly even reaching the equator.

The brilliant white shell reflected back the Sun's rays, and thus its heat, so well that the Snowball persisted for nearly 200 million years.

Eventually the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide (CO2), welling up from volcanoes, escaped into the air and thankfully set the planet onto a warming trend, and so the icy blanket was melted.

This scenario, first aired in 1989 and still fiercely contested, has now come under assault from a new angle by a trio of physicists at the University of Toronto, Canada.

They have devised a computer simulation of the CO2 during the late Neoproterozoic that factors in the role of oxygen in the ocean.

Progressive cooling would have allowed atmospheric oxygen to spread more deeply into the sea, transforming rich layers of dissolved organic carbon -- formerly created by photosynthesis -- into CO2, they say.

This CO2, released back into the atmosphere, warmed up the atmosphere through the greenhouse effect sufficiently to induce thawing, causing sea ice and glaciers to shrink, before a cooling cycle resumed.

In other words, the Cryogenian would have been a milder, slushier, shorter affair, with ice-free seas in the tropics where sunlight would have generated photosynthesis, rather than a deep, long, planetary freeze.

The ice age would not have required massive amounts of volcanic CO2 to end, nor would it have been delayed by millions of years.

In a commentary, which like the study appears in Thursday in the British journal Nature, US geologist Alan Kaufman questions Peltier's assumption that levels of atmospheric oxygen were similar to today's level -- a relatively high 21 percent of the air.

"Biological and geochemical evidence indicates that oxygen levels were low throughout most of the Neoproterozoic, with a significant rise in breathable air around 550 million years ago -- about the time animals first appeared on the planet," says Kaufman.

The Snowball debate has a bearing on another great enigmatic episode in Earth's history called the "Cambrian Explosion" -- the dramatic breakout of biodiversity that happened after the Neoproterozoic.

The microfossil record from this time is so emphatic that no one doubts that the Explosion happened.

Critics of the Snowball theory say that such a prolonged deep glaciation would have destroyed all life, leaving nothing left -- or at least very little -- to explain this sudden, riotous diversity.

Snowball supporters, though, argue that hardy microscopic biota survived unscathed during the long chill, thriving in shallow sea waters or melt pools on land in the tropics, or in thermal vents on the sea bed.

When the Snowball melted, these organisms grew swiftly in size and complexity, becoming the new masters of the planet, they contend.

Related Links
Explore The Early Earth at TerraDaily.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Dunes, Climate Models Don't Match Up With Paleomagnetic Records
Lincoln NE (SPX) Nov 27, 2007
For a quarter-century or more, the prevailing view among geoscientists has been that the portion of the ancient supercontinent of Pangea that is now the Colorado Plateau in southern Utah shifted more than 1,300 miles north during a 100-million year span that ended about 200 million years ago in the early Jurassic Period, when Pangea began to break up.







  • ESA Conducts Vega Main Engine Test In Kourou
  • New Thermal Protection Technologies For Reusable Launch Vehicles To Be Validated
  • Defense Focus: Engineer truths -- Part 1
  • Northrop Grumman Demonstrates New Rocket Engine Design Using Oxygen And Methane Propellants

  • Arianespace warns US over Chinese space 'dumping'
  • Sea Launch Reschedules The Thuraya-3 Launch Campaign
  • Sea Launch Reschedules The Thuraya-3 Launch Campaign
  • Thuraya-3 Satellite Launch Delayed Again

  • Conditions right for shuttle launch: NASA
  • Atlantis Crew And Launch Team Prep For STS-122
  • All go for Thursday's Atlantis launch: NASA
  • All ready for shuttle Atlantis blastoff: NASA

  • New space mission aims to broaden Europe's ISS role
  • Jules Verne ATV Given Its Wings
  • The European Columbus Space Laboratory Set To Reach ISS
  • Spacewalkers Complete More Harmony Hookup Work

  • Richard Branson Trains For Virgin Galactic Spaceflight At The NASTAR Center
  • MU Engineers Develop Software Solution For Complex Space Missions
  • Computer predicts Voyager 2 milestone
  • Star Talk

  • China says space ambitions no cause for foreign concern
  • China To Launch Mars Probe In 2009
  • China denies lunar probe photos were faked: report
  • China Completes Enclosure Of Land For Fourth Satellite Launch Center

  • Humanoid teaches dentists to feel people's pain: researchers
  • Japan looks at everyday use of robots
  • New Japanese lightweight robot on wheels can talk
  • Can A Robot Find A Rock. Interview With David Wettergreen: Part IV

  • Multi-Tasking Rover Supports Multiple Missions
  • Spirit Breaks Free In Race For Survival
  • Noctis Labyrinthus, Labyrinth Of The Night
  • Rover Perseveres Despite Stall In Robotic Arm

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement