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Greenhouse Earth The Greenhouse Era 100 Myr Ago The Cretaceous Period of the Mesozoic Era • Global Sea Level – 200 m higher than today • Shallow seas flooded continental interiors • Cretaceous is from the Latin word creta which means chalk Abundant Limestone Deposits Cretaceous Chalk Outcrop in Denmark Cretaceous Limestone Outcrop in Virginia, USA Cretaceous Geography • Continental flooding reduced the amount of surface land. • No evidence of any permanent ice on Earth, even at the poles. Fossils of Warm Adapted Animals in the Arctic: Reptiles Champsosaur Champsosaur Turtles Fossils of Warm Adapted Animals in the Arctic: Dinosaurs Fossils of Tropical Vegetation in the Arctic: • Fossil leaf of a tropical breadfruit tree found in the Arctic Antarctic Dinosaurs Small theropod (6 – 8 ft. tall) related to the raptors and tyrannosaurids Antarctic Dinosaurs Fossil pelvis of a small (6 – 8 ft tall and 30 ft. long) sauropod compared to its giant relative shown below Brachiosaurus Fossil Evidence • Fossils of tropical plants and animals – North of the Arctic Circle – South of the Antarctic Circle – Indicate a much warmer Earth • Tropical corals extended up to 10 degrees higher in latitude than they do at the present. Cretaceous Polar Regions • 20o C to 40o C warmer than present-day • The Antarctic today is very cold because – High elevation: Lapse-rate cooling with increased elevation – High albedo of the ice which reflects insolation Why Were the Poles So Warm? • The simplest explanation is CO2 levels that were up to 10 times present-day levels. Ocean Heat Transport Hypothesis • Changes in the amount of heat transported toward polar regions by the ocean • Cause changes in climate • Today – Deep ocean is filled with cold dense water • Sinks in polar regions – A small amount of intermediate depth Atlantic water • Comes from sinking of salty Mediterranean Sea water that flows into the Atlantic • Warmer water is denser due to high salinity it gains by strong evaporation Warm Saline Deep Water Filled Ocean Basins 100 Myr Ago • Formed in tropics or subtropics • Dense due to evaporation • Sank deeper than any water near warmer poles • Configuration of continents could have caused this – Large seaway near northern branch of the Hadley Cell’s descending air – Dry conditions and evaporation • Warm salty bottom water could have - Contributed to poleward heat flux to warm the poles - Reduced the large temperature and density contrast between the surface and bottom ocean which would caused faster overturning and more poleward heat flow. Sea Level Changes and Climate • Over tectonic time scales, average sea level has risen and fallen by several hundred meters – Transgressions: – Regressions: Rise in sea level Fall in sea level • Small in comparison to the >4000 m ocean depth – Can have significant effects on climate Continental Margins • Relatively flat – Sea Level Changes of 1:1000 (vertical to horizontal) • A sea level increase of 1 meter could extend as far inland as 1 km (1000 m) – The coastline can move 100’s of km Low Sea Level (Present-Day) • Coastline is near the break between the continental shelf and the steeper continental slope • Erosion is dominant on continental margins • Sediment is carried out to the slope and into the deep ocean High Sea Level • Ocean floods the continental shelf to a depth of 200 m or more • Sediment is deposited on the submerged shelf Eustatic Sea Level Changes • Eustatic refers to global or world-wide • Evidence is marine sediments of the same age – Deposited on several continents – At levels well above present-day sea level. Tectonic Causes of Eustatic Sea Level Changes • Changes in the volume of ocean ridges • Continental Collisions • Construction of Volcanic Submarine Plateaus 1. Changes in the Volume of Mid-Ocean Ridges • High elevation from heating from below. • Submarine lava flows • Expansion of rocks due to extreme heat • Causes surface of the ocean to rise Ridges Subside with Time • Initially anomalously high heat flow causes ridges to stand high above the seafloor • As rock moves away from the crest – Rapid subsidence due to heat loss • As rock continues to move along the ridge flanks – Rate of heat loss is more gradual • After 60 Myr – All excess heat is lost – Ridge elevations are a stable depth of 5500 m (average value) Ridge Depths are Constant with Age • Profiles (and volumes) of past ocean ridges can be reconstructed by using a relationship observed in the modern ocean basins. Ridge Depth = 2500 m + 350 (crustal age)1/2 (in meters) (at 0 age) (in Myr) – The average depth of all ridges today is 2500 m below the surface • This is used as the initial depth (0 age) – Age of the crust is obtained from paleomagnetic data • The ridge crest starts at 2500 depth and gradually deepens with age and increasing distance from the ridge – Rock cools and contracts Fast Spreading Rates • Ridges stand higher – Less time to cool and contract • Produce a wider, high elevation (“fat”) profile • Reduces the volume of ocean basins displacing water onto the continents • Transgressions occur resulting in eustatic sea level changes. Slow Spreading Rates • More time for crustal rocks to cool and contract • A narrower (“thin”) profile results – Ocean basins are deeper – Less water is displaced • Regressions occur resulting in eustatic seal level change Sea Level During the Cretaceous Period • Average spreading rates were at least 50% faster than today • Evidence of marine transgressions • Ocean basins had a lower capacity • Sea level was 200 to 300 m higher than today 2. Collisions of Continents • Continents “float” on the denser asthenosphere – Lower density granitic bedrock Collision Thickens the Crust • A high plateau is formed – Faulting shears off slivers of rock and stacks them on top of each other • A subsurface low-density root forms down to 60 or 70 km • The crust is double its normal 30 km thickness – Net area of continental crust is lost – Increases the area of the ocean basins • Sea level falls India is Colliding with southern Asia • The only continental collision within the last 100 Myr • First made contact 55 Myr ago • Still in progress – Increased area of the ocean by 2 million km2 – Sea level is about 40m lower than 100 Myr ago when no collisions were occurring 3. Construction of Volcanic Plateaus in the Ocean • A large region of 110 to 80 Myr old plateaus is buried beneath a thin layer of marine sediment in the tropical Pacific Ocean • Initially high above the nearby seafloor – Heat from volcanic origin • Today they are cooler and at lower levels • 80 Myr ago they likely displaced more sea water – Sea level was probably 40 m high than today Climate Factors and Sea Level • Water Stored in Ice Sheets • Thermal Contraction of Seawater Glacial Ice • Huge amounts of water stored on land – Sea Level is lower during ice ages • Water returns to the sea during interglacial periods – During the last ice age sea level was about 300 m lower than today Sea Level Today . . . • Antarctica’s Ice – Holds enough water to raise sea level 66 meters • Greenland’s Ice – Holds enough water to raise sea level 6 m • If all the ice on these continents melted, there would be a eustatic sea level increase of 72 meters Thermal Contraction of Seawater • Warmer water expands – Oceans 80 to 100 Myr ago would have occupied more space than the cooler ocean water today • Cooling of the oceans – Low latitude ocean has cooled slightly in the last 100 Myr – High Latitude Ocean surface and the deep ocean have cooled by 10o C to 15o C – Sea level has dropped 7 meters Summary of Sea Level Change Factors • When all factors are combined, a sea level decrease of 300 to 440 m is estimated • Rates of sediment deposition indicates sea level should only be 100 to 300 m lower • This discrepancy (“mismatch”) can be explained by uncertainties in – Past spreading rates – Volcanic plateaus – Sedimentation rates – Other factors Sea Level Change and Climate Changes Higher Sea Levels • Flooding of – Continental margins – Interior seaways • Continental extremes of climate would be moderated (water heats up and cools slower than land) – Milder, more maritime winters – Cooler summers Falling Sea Level • More land is exposed • Seasonally climate variations are more extreme Glaciation • Summer melting is a major control on the amount of glacial ice on Earth – Cooler summers result in less melting • Causes greater climate cooling and glaciation – (a higher albedo) • As a result, with higher sea level the moderating effect of water on climate should cause cooler summers with more glaciation – There should be less glaciation with today’s lower sea level Glaciation Mismatch • The record of the last 100 Myr shows just the opposite trend. – High sea levels of 100 Myr ago should have aided glaciation, but none occurred – Low sea levels of today should oppose glaciation, but we have ice sheets • This mismatch indicates that we should assume that sea level change does NOT control long-term climate change. Asteroid Impacts Frequency of Earth Impacts • Inverse relationship between size and frequency of impacts – Largest (>10 km): 50 to 100 Myr frequency • Great environmental impacts (e.g., “extinction events”) – Smaller objects impact much more frequently 10 km Diameter Meteorite Impacted 65 Myr Ago • Impacted at 20 km per second (72,000 km/hr or 44,712 mi/hr) • Created an immense shock wave that traveled outward at the same speed. • Seismic waves equivalent to an earthquake 100 to 1000 times stronger than the strongest recorded earthquakes. Chixulub Impact 1 second before impact 60 seconds after impact 5 seconds after impact 1000 years after impact A Global Extinction Event • Many paleontologists believe that this was a major cause of the non-avian dinosaur extinction. • But, not only the dinosaurs suffered extinction. • 70% of the living species and 40% of genera became extinct Planktonic Foraminifera • Extinction of all but one of 25 species Ammonite Cephalopds All became extinct Evidence of the Impact: Iridium Anomaly • World-wide distribution of clay containing the element iridium – Ir is rare in crustal rocks – It is found in much higher concentrations in some meteorites Ocean sediments with a layer of enriched Ir Boundary Clay • Closeup view of the boundary clay in the Raton Basin, New Mexico Chixulub Meteorite Impact Crater • Centered on the Yucatán Peninsula of Mexico • 180-km diameter structure • Lies beneath layers of sedimentary rock • Appears to be the right age Evidence for an Impact Crater Impact Crater Structure Barringer (“Meteor”) Crater, AZ Lunar Impact Crater Density Measurements of Rocks • Patterns of low density pulverized rock • High density rock • Consistent with an impact crater Shocked Quartz • No, shocked quartz isn't a pyschologically-distressed rock. • It is actually a structurally-altered form of quartz that • Created by a sudden application of extremely high pressure. Tektites • Small pieces of rock that were melted during the proposed impact and hurled into the atmosphere • Many are found in Antarctica Deposits of Huge Waves Catastrophic Results • Sunlight greatly diminished • Earth's surface temperatures were drastically reduced. • Sulfuric acid (H2SO4) and nitric acid (HNO3) resulted from vaporized rock and atmospheric gases – Both would have contributed to strongly acid rain that might have had devastating effects on vegetation and marine organisms Climatic and Environmental Effects • Over longer periods (decades to centuries) the abrupt injection of carbon biomass into the atmosphere by burning: – Increased CO2 levels – Lead to global warming • Large impacts are likely not long-term climate changers