Earth was at one time broiling, lifeless globe millions of years ago
Permian Era saw the extinction of 95 percent of all life
While there is much talk today about global warming, there was a time when the world's ocean's broiled at 104 degrees Fahrenheit. That age, around the Permian Era caused the vast majority of life on Earth to become extinct, scientists say.
It's estimated that the upper part of the ocean may have reached about 100 degrees, and sea-surface temperatures may have exceeded 104 degrees.
The Permian Era was about 250 million years ago and marked the greatest die-off in Earth's history. One of the chief factors behind this hellish environment was probably catastrophic volcanic activity. Great volcanoes spewing lava and ash in the area that is now known as Siberia and occupied as 2.7 million square miles of boiling lava. These eruptions may have released gases that damaged Earth's protective ozone layer.
Following the conclusion of the Permian mass extinction came a time "called the 'dead zone,'" Wignall said. "It's this 5-million-year period where there's no recovery, where there is a very low diversity of life."
The dead zone experienced extremes of global warming. Scientists have analyzed fossils dating from 253 million to 245 million years ago, shortly before and after the mass extinction.
Researchers studied isotopes or atomic variants of oxygen within these fossils. As marine creatures form shells, bones and teeth, "they tend to use lighter isotopes of oxygen under warmer conditions," Wignall said. "You can still see this today when looking at modern-day sea creatures. The ratios of oxygen isotopes in their shells are entirely controlled by temperature."
Strange, eel-like creatures known as conodonts, known mainly by their elaborate mouthparts came from the Nanpanjiang Basin in south China, which helped reconstruct what temperatures were like around the equator at the end-Permian.
Different conodonts helped determined what temperatures were at different depths. One group dubbed the Neospathodus, lived down about 230 feet deep, while others, such as Pachycladina, Parachirognathus and Platyvillosus lived near the surface.
"We had to go through several tons of rock to look at tiny conodont fossils," Wignall said. "People always thought the end-Permian extinctions were related to temperature increases, but they never measured the temperature then in much detail before, since it involves a lot of hard work looking at these microfossils."
The research revealed the largest "case of extreme global warming, the most extreme ever seen in the last 600 million years," Wignall said. "We think the main reason for the dead zone after the end-Permian is a very hot planet, particularly in equatorial parts of the world."
It's estimated that the upper part of the ocean may have reached about 100 degrees, and sea-surface temperatures may have exceeded 104 degrees. By comparison, today's average annual sea-surface temperatures around the equator are 77 to 86 degrees.
"Photosynthesis starts to shut down at about 395 degrees, and plants often start dying at temperatures above 104 degrees," Wignall said. "This would explain why there's not much fossil record of plants at the end-Permian- for instance, there are no peat swamps forming, no coal-forming whatsoever. This was a huge, devastating extinction."
Without plants to absorb carbon dioxide, more of this heat-trapping gas would stay in the atmosphere, driving up temperatures further. "There are other ways of taking carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere, but the planet lost a key way for millions of years," Wignall said.
© 2012, Catholic Online. Distributed by NEWS CONSORTIUM.
- - -
Pope Benedict XVI's Prayer Intentions for January 2013
General Intention: The Faith of Christians. That in this Year of Faith Christians may deepen their knowledge of the mystery of Christ and witness joyfully to the gift of faith in him.
Missionary Intention: Middle Eastern Christians. That the Christian communities of the Middle East, often discriminated against, may receive from the Holy Spirit the strength of fidelity and perseverance.
Keywords: Permia Era, global warming, volcanic activity, research
NEWSLETTERS »
Rate This Article
1 - 3 of 3 Comments
Leave a Comment
More Green News
- Lovely but deadly - beautiful bubbles in Canadian lake are flammable methane gas
- Oldest water in the world discovered beneath the earth's surface
- There's the problem! Americans are out of touch with scientific consensus on climate change
- Rare event, two Alaskan volcanoes simultaneously erupt
- Why are scientists in Cancun worried about melting snow on Mt. Everest?
- Atmospheric carbon dioxide hits 400 ppm, so why should we care?
- Sea level rise already forcing changes in Caribbean, other island nations
- Giant African snails invade Houston suburb, public warned
- First law of the black widow kingdom - Don't get old
Featured News
- Fr. Paul Schenck: Finding Living Faith on Catechetical Sunday
- The Movie Yellow: Incest as 'Normal' and Cassavates's Slides Into the World of Woes
- The Chicago School Teachers Strike Reveals the Need For School Choice
- The Sexual Barbarians and the Dissolution of Culture
- The Happy Priest Challenges Us to Ask: Who is Jesus to Me?
- Michael Coren on Canadian Public Schools: Teachers, leave those kids alone
- We Cannot Ignore Our Consciences: Cardinal Dolan On Religious Liberty
- In the Face of Danger, Successor of Peter Travels to Lebanon as a Messenger of Peace
- Reflections on the Dignity and Vocation of Women: Who or What?
Most Popular
There's the problem! Americans are out of touch with scientific consensus on climate change Read More
Editorial: Is the Scandal Ridden Obama Administration Becoming a House of Cards? Read More
Sex In Uniform: Why the Increase in Sexual Assaults in the Military? Read More
Bill Donohue, Catholic League, Disclose Fight with the IRS, Demonstrate Courage Read More
Has the Internal Revenue Service become 'Domestic Terrorists'? Read More
Daily Readings
Reading 1, Sirach 2:1-11
My child, if you aspire to serve the Lord, prepare yourself for ... Read More
Psalm, Psalms 37:3-4, 18-19, 27-28, 39-40
Put your trust in Yahweh and do right, make your home in the ... Read More
Gospel, Mark 9:30-37
After leaving that place they made their way through Galilee; ... Read More
Saint of the Day
St. Eugene de Mazenod
May 21: Eugene de Mazenod was born on August 1, 1782, at Aix-en-Provence ... Read More
Latest Videos
Catholic Mass from the Church of Ste. Genevieve (5/19/13) View Video
'Salve Virginale'- Gregorian Chant;'Fontgombault Abbey' HD View Video
'Salve Virginale'- Gregorian Chant;'Fontgombault Abbey' HD View Video
'Beata viscera Mariae'- Byrd-polyphony (HD) View Video
Learning about Gregorian Chant~ Solesmes View Video
Marketplace
Encountering Jesus in the Gospels and Daily Life Read More
Divine Mercy T-shirts
Start conversations, spread devotion, enlighten hearts. Evangelize ... Read More




Print















May God bless us and guides us on the right path.
Wonderful research. I read in the Qur'an, also this divine revelation of such a phenomenon which among other verses it is also mentioned in the section of Al-Bakara (the cow), 2:164. English translated below.
"" There are, In the creation of the heavens and the earth and the alternation of night and day and in the ships which sail in the sea with that which benefits mankind and in what Allah (only Creator) has sent down of water from the sky so he revived with it the earth after its death and scattered in it of every kind of animal and in the veering of winds and clouds established between the sky and the earth, there are signs for people who understand ""
It is noteworthy that "Al-Islam" means "complete deliverance" and in context "Voluntarily complete deliverance to the only Creator (Allah in Arabic)", following Adam and Abraham (may peace be upon them) going through all the monotheistic prophets and messengers, til prophet Muhammad (may peace be upon him).
God bless you
Darth: No, it doesn't.
This flies in the face of Traditional theology and undermines both true science and an orthodox understanding of original sin.