. Earth Science News .
Prehistoric Global Warming May Have Contributed To Fossil Preservation

"Lowered levels of oxygen can kill fish and other creatures in marginally aerated environments, and also preserve their carcasses from dismemberment and decay," said Retallack. Image credit: Janice McCafferty.

Salt Lake City (SPX) Oct 13, 2005
Prehistoric global warming episodes from massive atmospheric pollution involving carbon dioxide and methane could have created and preserved "mass kills" of wildlife, according to a University of Oregon study presented at the Geological Society of America's annual meeting.

The work, done by Gregory Retallack, professor of geologic sciences at Oregon, involved a worldwide compilation of thousands of exceptionally well preserved fossil assemblages of fish, crustaceans, insects, starfish and other life forms. There are only about 41 episodes of exceptional preservation from the last 500 million years, and each episode is widely distributed around the world.

Well known examples of such preservation of complete soft-bodied fish and other creatures include the Burgess Shale (dating to the Middle Cambrian Period of about 508 million years ago and found near Field, British Columbia) and the Solnhofen Plattenkalk (dating to the Late Jurassic Period of about 150 million years ago and found in Bavaria, Germany).

Such exceptional assemblages were thought to have been preserved in environments that were unusually low in oxygen, highly saline, very cold, or extremely dry. What was not suspected until the new compilation was the global distribution of other exceptional fossil deposits of the same ages.

Independent estimates of atmospheric pollution crises come from studies of carbon anomalies, microscopic pores of fossil leaves and climatic indicators from fossil soils. Methane outbursts from volcanically intruded coals and submarine gas hydrates are prime suspects for these lethal atmospheric pollution events.

"Lowered levels of oxygen can kill fish and other creatures in marginally aerated environments, and also preserve their carcasses from dismemberment and decay," said Retallack.

"Data from carbon anomalies and microscopic leaf pores indicate that some of these killer greenhouses ramped up, within only a few thousand years, to intolerable levels of more than 10 times the modern level of atmospheric carbon dioxide.

"What stopped them from continuing on to a sterile greenhouse atmosphere like that of Venus? It was the widespread death and burial of animals and their carbon which created fossil bonanzas, the likes of which may have saved us from the heat sterilization experienced by our sister planet."

Mass kills of fish, insects and plants could have saved Earth from greenhouse sterilization

Related Links
University of Oregon
SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express

The Tropics Play A More Active Role Than Was Thought In Controlling The Earth's Climate
Barcelona, Spain (SPX) Oct 12, 2005
Researchers from the Universitat Aut�noma de Barcelona and Durham University (UK) have discovered that a million years ago, global climate changes occurred due to changes in tropical circulation in the Pacific similar to those caused by El Ni�o today. Changes in atmospheric circulation caused variations in heat fluxes and moisture transport, triggering a large expansion of the polar ice sheets and a reorganisation of the Earth's climate.







  • US-Central America Security Deal Fails
  • Many More Doctors Needed To Help SAsia Quake Victims: UN
  • Bulldozers Move In As Quake Rescue Teams Face Grim Truth
  • Climate Change Will Stress Stormwater Drainage Systems

  • Prehistoric Global Warming May Have Contributed To Fossil Preservation
  • The Tropics Play A More Active Role Than Was Thought In Controlling The Earth's Climate
  • Underlying Cause Of Massive Pinyon Pine Die-Off Revealed
  • North Sea Efficient Sink For Carbon Dioxide

  • Interview With Volker Liebig On The Loss Of Cryosat
  • Wetlands Satellite Mapping Scheme Yielding First Results
  • DigitalGlobe Unveils Plans For WorldView I And WorldView II Imaging Systems
  • Ice Satellite Loss Was A Disaster, Say Scientists

  • NATO Means Business To Protect Pipelines
  • Spaceward Foundation And NASA Announce Beam Power And Tether Competitions
  • Heat And Electricity Generator That Reduces Contaminant Emissions
  • Energy To Get Top Billing At Weekend G20 Talks

  • Analysis: WHO Chief Warns Of Bird Flu
  • Greek Hunters, Ecologists In Unlikely Alliance To Fight Bird Flu
  • In Malawi, AIDS Pushes Food Shortages To Crisis Point
  • Plan Warns Of Up To 1.9 Million Us Dead In Flu Epidemic: Report

  • Seaweed Yields New Compounds With Pharmaceutical Potential
  • Malaysian Palm Oil Industry Denies Fuelling Orang-Utan Extinction
  • NASA Discovers Life's Building Blocks Are Common In Space
  • The Shape Of Things To Come: Morphology Database Going Global

  • Mystery Fumes Envelope Lagos
  • Katrina Floodwaters Not As Toxic To Humans As Previously Thought, Study Says
  • UCSD Leads Team To Build Geographic Information System To Assess Toxic Hazards From Katrina
  • Environment Group Names Europe's 'Dirty Thirty' Power Stations

  • Scientists Uncover Why Picture Perception Works
  • The Roots Of Civilization Trace Back To ... Roots
  • The Mechanics Of Foot Travel
  • Compound May Prevent Neuron-Degeneration

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights 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 SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement