This
is about as close as you’ll get to a 'sort-of' acknowledgement of the
existence of the methane emergency from state-controlled Radio New
Zealand.
Hopefully people can read between the lines – but I doubt it
They cannot even bear to use the 'E' word in relation to PETM, millions of years ago. And of course, it all takes thousands of years.
Hopefully people can read between the lines – but I doubt it
They cannot even bear to use the 'E' word in relation to PETM, millions of years ago. And of course, it all takes thousands of years.
Ancient
Super Greenhouse
by Veronika Meduna
Radio NZ
Geologists come from all over the world to study the exposed rocks in Mead Stream Gorge.
Radio NZ
Mead
Stream Gorge, about halfway between Blenheim and Kaikoura, is one of
New Zealand’s geological wonderlands – and possibly the only
place in New Zealand where you can travel through 90 million years of
geological history in one day.
One
section of the geological record is of particular interest to
geologists. Some 55 million years ago, Earth went through a period of
rapidly rising global temperatures and massive increases in
greenhouse gas concentrations - and this super greenhouse event,
known as the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum or PETM, is thought of
as an analogue for our current climate conditions.
Its
geological signature lies in the layers of soft mud and harder
limestone, with each marking a period of warming and recovery.
“Temperatures went up very dramatically, not just here but all
around the world,” says James Crampton, a palaeontologist at GNS
Science.
'One
of the results of that – just as we are experiencing today – was
the fact that because the atmosphere warmed, it held more moisture
and therefore rainfall intensified and you got more weathering and
erosion on land. That brought more mud out into the deep sea where
these rocks were deposited.'
Chris
Hollis, left, uses micro fossils to decipher environmental changes in
the past, while Jerry Dickens focuses on the study of how carbon
cycles between the oceans and the atmosphere.
Gerald
Dickens, known as Jerry, is a geochemist at Rice University in
Houston, Texas. He’s been coming all the way to Mead Stream for
many years because it is such a good place to study this period of
ancient abrupt climate change. He says the rocks tell the story of a
rapid increase in carbon in the atmosphere that had significant
effects on ecosystems at the time.
The
event lasted about 200,000 years (incidentally about the same period
of time that it took us to evolve from our early hominin ancestors)
and its chemical signature suggests that thousands of gigatonnes of
carbon were released quickly.
The
explanation is that as the world warmed, it crossed a critical
threshold, at which stores of methane, either in frozen hydrates on
the seafloor or in permafrost soils, were released suddenly and
rapidly.
Chris
Hollis, a palaeontologist at GNS Science, says the PETM was the
biggest but not the only major climate change event. “It starts off
with a bang with the PETM, where the rocks change, they get softer,
and they are recording more clay coming into the ocean. This one
event lasts for about 200,000 years and then the rocks get back to
what they were before. And then there’s a whole series of cycles of
these rapid warming events.”
These cycles are recorded at Mead Streams as alternating layers of limestone and mud. The layers in turn contain fossils of microscopic plants and animals, which not only tell the story of how the climate changed but also what impact that change had on the environment at the time.
Radiolaria are tiny animals that produce intricate mineral skeletons. They are found as zooplankton throughout the world's ocean, and their skeletal remains are found in sediments that form on the ocean floor
Radiolaria
are tiny animals that produce intricate mineral skeletons. They are
found as zooplankton throughout the world's ocean, and their skeletal
remains are found in sediments that form on the ocean floor.
.
In
the palaeontology laboratory at GNS Science, Chris Hollis extracts
the microfossils to decipher the detailed history of change. He says
microfossils represent four basic types: calcareous nanoplankton and
diatoms, which are both microscopic plants, and foraminifera and
radiolaria (pictured above), which are tiny animals.
'The
nanoplankton is made up of calcium carbonate and widespread in the
world’s oceans. It’s the background pelagic rain that falls to
the seafloor in the oceans. Diatoms are made of silicate shells and
they signify times of high productivity.'
Foraminifera
and radiolaria are the animal equivalents, with forams made up of
calcium carbonate and radiolaria of silicate shells. “Immediately,
the relative abundance of these four basic types of microfossils
gives us some guide to the productivity of the oceans,” he says.
By
identifying them to species level, Chris can use microfossils to set
up a time frame. “Microfossils evolve quite rapidly through time,
so there are distinct species that represent specific time intervals.
By looking at the assemblages we can say something about the
environment, something about the climate and something about the age
of the rocks.”
Of
particular interest to palaeontologists are the periods of recovery,
during which carbon dioxide is stripped from the atmosphere. Chris
Hollis says there are two main explanations – that the source of
the carbon is simply used up, and that biological production in the
ocean increases and eventually draws the CO2 out of the atmosphere.
He
says there is no question that natural processes can cause global
warming events, but the “important thing to remember is that the
recovery lasted 200,000 years”.
And
the rate at which carbon increased in the atmosphere during past
events of global warming was much slower.
'For
the PETM and other events the rate is in the order of thousands of
years, rather than decades to centuries.'
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