. Earth Science News .




.
EARLY EARTH
Methane may be answer to 56-million-year question
by Staff Writers
Hoston TX (SPX) Nov 15, 2011

Research at Rice University bolstered a long-controversial theory that massive amounts of carbon from methane hydrate caused the Earth to warm 56 million years ago and drastically change the ecosystem. Rice scientists proposed in a new Nature Geoscience paper that hydrates collected in a narrower stability zone than today under the seafloor over millions of years were discharged rapidly as the planet warmed, much as an electrical capacitor gathers charge and releases it quickly. (Credit Guangsheng Gu/Rice University)

The release of massive amounts of carbon from methane hydrate frozen under the seafloor 56 million years ago has been linked to the greatest change in global climate since a dinosaur-killing asteroid presumably hit Earth 9 million years earlier. New calculations by researchers at Rice University show that this long-controversial scenario is quite possible.

Nobody knows for sure what started the incident, but there's no doubt Earth's temperature rose by as much as 6 degrees Celsius. That affected the planet for up to 150,000 years, until excess carbon in the oceans and atmosphere was reabsorbed into sediment.

Earth's ecosystem changed and many species went extinct during the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) 56 million years ago, when at least 2,500 gigatonnes of carbon, eventually in the form of carbon dioxide, were released into the ocean and atmosphere. (The era is described in great detail in a recent National Geographic feature.)

A new report by Rice scientists in Nature Geoscience suggests that at the time, even though methane-containing gas hydrates - the "ice that burns" - occupied only a small zone of sediment under the seabed before the PETM, there could have been as much stored then as there is now.

This is a concern to those who believe the continued burning of fossil fuels by humans could someday trigger another feedback loop that disturbs the stability of methane hydrate under the ocean and in permafrost; this change could warm the atmosphere and prompt the release of large amounts of methane, a more powerful greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide.

Some who study the PETM blame the worldwide burning of peat, volcanic activity or a massive asteroid strike as the source of the carbon, "but there's no crater, or any soot or evidence of the burning of peat," said Gerald Dickens, a Rice professor of Earth science and an author of the study, who thinks the new paper bolsters the argument for hydrates.

The lead author is graduate student Guangsheng Gu; co-authors are Walter Chapman, the William W. Akers Professor in Chemical Engineering; George Hirasaki, the A.J. Hartsook Professor in Chemical Engineering; and alumnus Gaurav Bhatnagar, all of Rice; and Frederick Colwell, a professor of ocean ecology and biogeochemistry at Oregon State University.

In the ocean, organisms die, sink into the sediment and decompose into methane. Under high pressure and low temperatures, methane molecules are trapped by water, which freezes into a slushy substance known as gas hydrate that stabilizes in a narrow band under the seafloor.

Warmer oceans before the PETM would have made the stability zone for gas hydrate thinner than today, and some scientists have argued this would allow for much less hydrate than exists under the seafloor now. "If the volume - the size of the box - was less than today, how could it have released so much carbon?" Dickens asked. "Gu's solution is that the box contains a greater fraction of hydrate."

"The critics said, 'No, this can't be. It's warmer; there couldn't have been more methane hydrate,'" Hirasaki said. "But we applied the numerical model and found that if the oceans were warmer, they would contain less dissolved oxygen and the kinetics for methane formation would have been faster."

With less oxygen to consume organic matter on the way down, more sank to the ocean floor, Gu said, and there, with seafloor temperatures higher than they are today, microbes that turn organic matter into methane work faster. "Heat speeds things up," Dickens said. "It's true for almost all microbial reactions. That's why we have refrigerators."

The result is that a stability zone smaller than what exists now may have held a similar amount of methane hydrate. "You're increasing the feedstock, processing it faster and packing it in over what could have been millions of years," Dickens said.

While the event that began the carbon-discharge cycle remains a mystery, the implications are clear, Dickens said. "I've always thought of (the hydrate layer) as being like a capacitor in a circuit. It charges slowly and can release fast - and warming is the trigger. It's possible that's happening right now."

That makes it important to understand what occurred in the PETM, he said. "The amount of carbon released then is on the magnitude of what humans will add to the cycle by the end of, say, 2500. Compared to the geological timescale, that's almost instant."

"We run the risk of reproducing that big carbon-discharge event, but faster, by burning fossil fuel, and it may be severe if hydrate dissociation is triggered again," Gu said, adding that methane hydrate also offers the potential to become a valuable source of clean energy, as burning methane emits much less carbon dioxide than other fossil fuels.

The calculations should encourage geologists who discounted hydrates' impact during the PETM to keep an open mind, Dickens said. "Instead of saying, 'No, this cannot be,' we're saying, 'Yes, it's certainly possible.'"

Read the abstract here.

Related Links
Rice University
Explore The Early Earth at TerraDaily.com




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries




.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



EARLY EARTH
Unraveling the causes of the Ice Age megafauna extinctions
Copenhagen, Denmark (SPX) Nov 10, 2011
Was it humans or climate change that caused the extinctions of the iconic Ice Age mammals (megafauna) such as the woolly rhinoceros and woolly mammoth? For decades, scientists have been debating the reasons behind these enigmatic Ice Age mass extinctions, which caused the loss of a third of the large mammal species in Eurasia and two thirds of the species in North America. Now an ext ... read more


EARLY EARTH
UN atomic agency praises Fukushima clean-up

China mourns victims of deadly Shanghai fire

North China gas blast kills nine

North China gas blast kills eight: state media

EARLY EARTH
Russia Mars probe may fall to Earth in January: official

Raytheon Given Export Approvals for Advanced Maritime Radar

Radioactive iodine: Now France detects traces in atmosphere

Kindle Fire shipping to mixed reviews

EARLY EARTH
Climate change threatens Nile, Limpopo rivers: study

One if by Land, Two if by Sea? Climate Change "Escape Routes"

In Romania, hydro frenzy spells green dilemma

Group calls on tuna fisheries for better shark protection

EARLY EARTH
Prof Helping To Unravel Causes Of Ice Age Extinctions

International Team to Drill Beneath Massive Antarctic Ice Shelf

Preparing for a thaw: How Arctic microbes respond to a warming world

Chinese tycoon one step closer to Icelandic land purchase

EARLY EARTH
Researchers gain insight into 100-year-old Haber-Bosch process

Some land in Japan too radioactive to farm: study

WWF sounds warning on caviar

EU tightens control of Chinese rice over GM fears

EARLY EARTH
Bangkok floods could go into next year: Thai PM

Flood-weary residents lash out in Bangkok

Erupting volcano DR Congo's hottest new tourist attraction

40 dead in latest Turkey quake: authorities

EARLY EARTH
Nobel laureate Gbowee to lead Liberian peace initiative

Sudan beefing up border air strike capacity: monitors

US condemns bombing by Sudan Armed Forces

S.Sudan accuses Khartoum of deadly air strike on camp

EARLY EARTH
Live longer with fewer calories

Asian couples rush to wed on auspicious date

The selective advantage of being on the edge of a migration wave

Erasing the signs of aging in cells is now a reality


.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2011 - Space Media Network. 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 Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement