An extraordinary episode of global cooling hundreds
of millions of years ago that some experts say caused Earth to
completely freeze over has been miscalculated, a new study says.
Instead of "Snowball Earth," the planet really became "Slushball Earth," its authors suggest.
The great chill -- the longest and deepest ice age in Earth's known
history -- happened during the late Neoproterozoic era, 850 to 542
million years ago.
The evidence for the Snowball thesis comes from deep sediments in the ocean.
Scientists look through these layers to measure levels of the isotope
carbon 13 (C13), deposited in plants through photosynthesis, as a
telltale of Earth's climate.
Above and below the Cryogenian layer is an abundance of C13. But the
Cryogenian layer itself has negligible levels of this isotope.
Coupled with other signs of intense glaciation, the explanation is that
Earth froze over completely -- thick ice covered the oceans and
glaciers crept down into the tropics, possibly even reaching the
equator.
The brilliant white shell reflected back the Sun's rays, and thus its
heat, so well that the Snowball persisted for nearly 200 million years.
Eventually the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide (CO2), welling up from
volcanoes, escaped into the air and thankfully set the planet onto a
warming trend, and so the icy blanket was melted.
This scenario, first aired in 1989 and still fiercely contested, has
now come under assault from a new angle by a trio of physicists at the
University of Toronto, Canada.
They have devised a computer simulation of the CO2 during the late
Neoproterozoic that factors in the role of oxygen in the ocean.
Progressive cooling would have allowed atmospheric oxygen to spread
more deeply into the sea, transforming rich layers of dissolved organic
carbon -- formerly created by photosynthesis -- into CO2, they say.
This CO2, released back into the atmosphere, warmed up the atmosphere
through the greenhouse effect sufficiently to induce thawing, causing
sea ice and glaciers to shrink, before a cooling cycle resumed.
In other words, the Cryogenian would have been a milder, slushier,
shorter affair, with ice-free seas in the tropics where sunlight would
have generated photosynthesis, rather than a deep, long, planetary
freeze.
The ice age would not have required massive amounts of volcanic CO2 to end, nor would it have been delayed by millions of years.
In a commentary, which like the study appears in Thursday in the
British journal Nature, US geologist Alan Kaufman questions Peltier's
assumption that levels of atmospheric oxygen were similar to today's
level -- a relatively high 21 percent of the air.
"Biological and geochemical evidence indicates that oxygen levels were
low throughout most of the Neoproterozoic, with a significant rise in
breathable air around 550 million years ago -- about the time animals
first appeared on the planet," says Kaufman.
The Snowball debate has a bearing on another great enigmatic episode in
Earth's history called the "Cambrian Explosion" -- the dramatic
breakout of biodiversity that happened after the Neoproterozoic.
The microfossil record from this time is so emphatic that no one doubts that the Explosion happened.
Critics of the Snowball theory say that such a prolonged deep
glaciation would have destroyed all life, leaving nothing left -- or at
least very little -- to explain this sudden, riotous diversity.
Snowball supporters, though, argue that hardy microscopic biota
survived unscathed during the long chill, thriving in shallow sea
waters or melt pools on land in the tropics, or in thermal vents on the
sea bed.
When the Snowball melted, these organisms grew swiftly in size and
complexity, becoming the new masters of the planet, they contend.