Rapid Temperature Rise On Ancient Earth Triggered Warming That Lasted Thousands Of Years

MessageToEagle.com – A rapid rise in temperature on ancient Earth triggered a climate response that may have prolonged the warming for many thousands of years, according to scientists.

A new study provides new evidence of a climate feedback that could explain the long duration of the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM), which is considered the best analogue for modern climate change. It also suggests that climate change today could have long-lasting impacts on global temperature even if humans are able to curb greenhouse gas emissions.

Earth - Rise of Temperature

“We found evidence for a feedback that occurs with rapid warming that can release even more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere,” Shelby Lyons, a doctoral student in geosciences at Penn State, said in a press release.

“This feedback may have extended the PETM climate event for tens or hundreds of thousands of years. We hypothesize this is also something that could occur in the future.”

Increased erosion during the PETM, approximately 56 million years ago, freed large amounts of fossil carbon stored in rocks and released enough carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, into the atmosphere to impact temperatures long term, researchers said.

Evidence was found for the massive carbon release in coastal sediment fossil cores and researchers analyzed the samples using an innovative molecular technique that enabled them to trace how processes like erosion moved carbon in deep time.

Global temperatures increased by about 9 to 14.4 degrees Fahrenheit during the PETM, radically changing conditions on Earth. Severe storms and flooding became more common, and the warm, wet weather led to increased erosion of rocks.

As erosion wore down mountains over thousands of years, carbon was released from rocks and transported by rivers to oceans, where some was reburied in coastal sediments. Along the way, some of the carbon entered the atmosphere as greenhouse gas.

“What we found in records were signatures of carbon transport that indicated there were massive erosion regimes occurring on land,” Lyons said. “Carbon was locked on land and during the PETM it was moved and reburied. We were interested in seeing how much carbon dioxide that could release.”

Fossiliferous core from a drilling site in Maryland. IMAGE: ROSIE OAKES / PENN STATE
Fossiliferous core from a drilling site in Maryland. Image: Rosie Oaks/Penn State

Studying of PETM core samples from Maryland revealed traces of older carbon that must have once been stored in rocks on land. Carbon in these samples did not share common isotope patterns of life from the PETM and appeared oily, as if it been heated over long periods of time in a different location.

“That told us what we were looking at in the records was not just material that was formed during the PETM,” Lyons said. “It was not just carbon that had been formed and deposited at that time, but likely represented something older being transported in.”

The researchers developed a mixing model to distinguish the sources of carbon. Based on the amount of older carbon in the samples, scientists were able to estimate how much carbon dioxide was released during the journey from rock to ocean sediment.

They estimated the climate feedback could have released enough carbon dioxide to explain the roughly 200,000-year duration of the PETM, something that has not been well understood.

The researchers said the findings offer a warning about modern climate change. If warming reaches certain tipping points, feedbacks can be triggered that have the potential to cause even more temperature change.

“One lesson we can learn from this research is that carbon is not stored very well on land when the climate gets wet and hot,” Freeman said. “Today, we’re pushing the system out of equilibrium and it’s not going to snap back, even when we start reducing carbon dioxide emissions.”

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