Geology Times
Recent News |  Archives |  Tags |  About |  Newsletter |  Submit News |  Links |  Subscribe to GeologyTimes.com RSS Feed Subscribe
New Articles
Forests may play overlooked role in regulating climate 11/20/2008

Glacial erosion changes internal mountain structure, responses to plate tectonics 11/19/2008

Acid soils in Slovakia tell somber tale 11/19/2008

Electronic heat trap grips deep Earth 11/16/2008

Measuring water from space 11/16/2008

Deep heat solution to 500-million year mystery 11/14/2008

Dry spells spelled trouble in ancient China 11/13/2008

A new approach in tsunami-early warning 11/12/2008

Sunlight has more powerful influence on ocean circulation and climate than North American ice sheets 11/11/2008

When it comes to sea level changing glaciers, new NASA technique measures up 11/11/2008

Rocks could be harnessed to sponge vast amounts of CO2 from air, says study 11/10/2008

Ecologists use oceanographic data to predict future climate change 11/10/2008

U of Minnesota researchers uncover surprising effects of climate patterns in ancient China 11/9/2008

World needs climate emergency backup plan, says expert 11/8/2008

Seismic response to natural gas anomalies in crystalline rocks 11/7/2008

Volcanic Activity Key to Oxygen-rich Atmosphere (8/30/2007)

Tags:
volcanoes

An artist's cross-section of an underwater volcano and the processes that drive them. Submarine volcanoes can sometimes form islands. - Image Credit: Zina Deretsky, National Science Foundation
An artist's cross-section of an underwater volcano and the processes that drive them. Submarine volcanoes can sometimes form islands. - Image Credit: Zina Deretsky, National Science Foundation
Next time you catch a breath, be thankful, for a change, that the Earth's surface is dotted with volcanoes.

National Science Foundation-funded research published this week in the journal Nature indicates that billions of years ago, when the Earth was home largely to undersea volcanoes, some previously unknown agent was removing the gas.

The researchers suggest that mixture of gases and lavas produced by submarine volcanoes scrubbed oxygen from the atmosphere and bound it into oxygen-containing minerals.

Lee R. Kump, a professor of geosciences at Penn State University, working with a colleague at the University of Western Australia, looked at the geologic record from the Archaean--a geologic period from 3.8 to 2.5 billion years before the present day--and the Palaeoproterozoic-- geologic era immediately following that featured profound global change that included the breakup and formation of two supercontinents. They found that in the Archean there was a dearth of terrestrial volcanoes, while in the Palaeoproterozoic, although submarine volcanoes continued to be common, the population of terrestrial volcanoes increased dramatically.

"The rise of oxygen allowed for the evolution of complex oxygen-breathing life forms," Kump said.

Terrestrial volcanoes could become much more common because land masses stabilized and the current system of tectonics regime took shape.

Because submarine volcanoes erupt at lower temperatures than terrestrial volcanoes, they are more efficient at converting--or "reducing"--oxygen. As long as the reducing ability of the submarine volcanoes was larger than the amounts of oxygen created, the atmosphere had no oxygen. When terrestrial volcanoes began to dominate, oxygen levels increased.

The change over time caused an atmospheric shift from oxygen-free to oxygen-rich, the researchers argue, with profound implications for life on the planet.

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by NSF

Cheap Electricity - Loans - Credit Cards - Loans - payday loans - compare credit cards - cheap car insurance

Post Comments:

Search

  Archives |  Submit News |  Advertise With Us |  Contact Us |  Links
All contents © 2000 - 2009 Web Doodle, LLC. All rights reserved.