
Paul Olsen / Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory
In Clifton, N.J., a massive lava flow (black rock on left) from the time of the End Triassic is exposed in a former quarry. Reddish sedimentary rocks signaling the extinction itself lie to the far right.
By Tanya Lewis
LiveScience
Massive volcanic eruptions may have led to the extermination of half of Earth's species some 200 million years ago, a new study suggests.
The release of gases from giant eruptions caused climate change that led to the End-Triassic Extinction, the widespread loss of land and sea species that made way for the rise of the dinosaurs, the research says. The new study, published Thursday in the journal Science, shows that a set of major eruptions spanning from what is now New Jersey to Morocco occurred very close to the time of the extinction.
Scientists suspected previously that such volcanic activity and the resultant climate change were responsible for this major extinction and at least four others. But researchers weren't able to constrain the dates of the eruptions and extinctions well enough to prove the hypothesis. The new study, however, dates the End-Triassic Extinction to 201.56 million years ago, the same time the volcanoes were blowing their tops.
The eruptions, known as the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province, began when the land on Earth was part of one giant supercontinent called Pangaea. They lasted more than 600,000 years and created a rift that became the Atlantic Ocean. The researchers studied lava from these flows in modern-day Nova Scotia, Morocco and New Jersey. [Big Blasts: History's 10 Most Destructive Volcanoes]
The previous dates for these eruptions had error margins of 1 million to 3 million years, but this study decreases those numbers by an order of magnitude, lead author Terrence Blackburn, a geologist at the Carnegie Institution for Science, told LiveScience.
The results showed that the oldest massive eruptions were in Morocco, followed by the ones in Nova Scotia 3,000 years later and then those in New Jersey another 10,000 years after that. Animal and plant fossils, along with pollen and spores from the Triassic era, can be found in sediment layers underneath the lava flows, but not in layers above them. This suggests the eruptions wiped out those species. The organisms that went extinct include eel-like fish called conodonts, early crocodile species, tree lizards and broad-leaved plants.
The evidence heats up
Blackburn and colleagues determined the age of the lavas based on their mineral content. When lava flows cool, the center regions remain hot, and some chemical elements, such as the mineral zircon, fail to crystallize. Zircon incorporates large amounts of uranium, which radioactively decays into lead at a specific rate. By measuring the ratio of uranium to lead in lava rock, the scientists could figure out precisely when the eruptions occurred.
"Zircon's really the perfect time capsule," Blackburn said.
A second piece of evidence supporting the role of volcanism comes from reversals in the Earth's magnetic field. The researchers found mineral grains from one of these reversals in the sediment layer that formed just before the extinction. Since the researchers found the same layers at every site they studied, the magnetic reversal serves as a marker for when the extinction occurred.
A final line of evidence comes from repetitive motions of the Earth. As the planet rotates on its axis, it wobbles around like a top, which causes the amount of energy it receives from the sun to fluctuate depending on the areas that are pointed directly at the sun. These fluctuations correspond to different climate conditions and occur on a regular interval. By using these intervals, the researchers were able to determine the age of fossil-containing sediments to within 20,000 years.
Warming the planet
The gigantic eruptions would have vented sulfates that reflected sunlight back into space, effectively cooling the planet for several thousand years. But the eruptions would also have released large amounts of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases, causing global warming. Many species wouldn't have been able to survive this dramatic shift in temperature and would have died out.
The findings are "a nice confirmation of what we and others have been aware of for some time," geologist Paul Renne of the Berkeley Geochronology Center in California, who was not involved in the study, told LiveScience. "The main difference is the dating that they used is more precise than our results were."
Follow Tanya Lewis on Twitter and Google+. Follow us @livescience, Facebook and Google+. Original article on LiveScience.com.
- 50 Amazing Facts About Planet Earth
- Wipe Out: History's Most Mysterious Extinctions
- The 10 Biggest Volcanic Eruptions in History
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They will eventually return to bite us too. Well maybe not--Obama may have us extinct long before that.
Minerals are rarely "chemical elements;" zircon is not one of those examples! Also, the biota became extinct, not "went extinct." "Extinct" is a state of being, not an action like fishing or skiing. Did you flunk verb conjugation?
They went missing, and are presumed extinct.
200 million ---- 50 million ah what's the difference , there have been so many continental shifts and volcannic disasters that we don't even know about how or why or when all of them have happened . I think asteroids hit the earth . fracture it , cause volcanos and techtonic plates to go off and the earth wobbles a little the poles shift and the crust realigns and viola' ... new continents and all ... lol a new centrifical spin and the survivors are good for another 650 thousand years or so give or take a few disasters along the way
Yellowstone is next, unless we can just pray the supervolcano away. :)
"unless we can just pray the supervolcano away"
You go with Hephaestus, I'll go with a jug of milk. -joe
yep, volcanos... things are heating up all over again..
and after the next venting it will cool. Patience, not tax dollars will cure global warming.
Just the extinction of man.
yellowstone or a visit from a rogue black hole would be my top two extinction events that if i had to choose those would be the ones i would pick to see.
Zircons are hard to melt, so they preserve the fraction of O16/O18 and Uranium, but when the do melt and don't crystallize, these fractions label the lava. So knowing that zircons are a standard, that the source can be determined by consistent or variable O16/O18 content, and allow the subsequent decay of Uranium to lead so show the age, and fine tune these by measuring magnetic reversals, and further changes caused by axia precession.
Right/Wrong
Am I missing something? The Volcanos blow Sulphuric Acid into the Atmosphere &
cause Global Cooling through reflection. They also blow CO2 into the Atmosphere
causing Global Warming. All at the same time. Interesting concept here. Maybe
some parts warmed up & other parts cooled down.
Then all sorts of chemical reactions take place. There is lots of lightning creating Nitrogen that combines with Hydrogen & Oxygen in the Atmosphere to form Nitric Acid that destroys just about all metals. Hydrogen combining with CO2 & SO2 Forming Carbonic Acid & Hydrogensulfite, destroying the land. That being absorbed
by the sea & forming Hydrochloric & Sulphuric Acids destroying the sea.
Must have been a mess for a few hundred thousand years.
It must be wonderful to be a geologist and just look at a landscape and be able to read it like an ancient history book.
"It must be wonderful to be a geologist and just look at a landscape and be able to read it like an ancient history book." -N. Texas
Hell of a lot better than some smuck with a $5 prayer book, giving policy to god, eh? -joe
@Reader in North Texas:
Yes, yes it is wonderful to be a geologist! I love it. :)
One giant supercontinent called Pangaea, which covered only 5% of the Earths surface. The other was 95% WATER...
It was the volcanic activity/tectonic plates moving that have resulted in the current 28+% Land and 71%+water.
In the last 600 million years of Earth's history only the Carboniferous Period and our present age, the Quaternary Period, have witnessed CO2 levels less than 400 ppm, except during periods of glacial expansion during ice ages...
During the glacieraction of Antarctica 38 Million years Ago (Ma) the CO2 levels were about 760 ppm, according to NASA...
During the Jurassic Period (201.3± 0.6 Ma to 145± 4 Ma), average CO2 concentrations were about 1800 ppm or about 4.7 times higher than today and temperatures were just 3°C higher than now...
The highest concentrations of CO2 during all of the Paleozoic Era occurred during the Cambrian Period (543 to 505 Ma) nearly 7000 ppm -- about 18 times higher than today...
But remember that the current AGW people state that volcanoes emit CO2 & other gases, but not enough to significantly contribute to the greenhouse effect... Ha! Ha!