Wednesday, September 05, 2012

Was the KT Extinction Actually Two Extinction Events?

The most-studied mass extinction in Earth history happened 65 million years ago and is widely thought to have wiped out the dinosaurs. New University of Washington research indicates that a separate extinction came shortly before that, triggered by volcanic eruptions that warmed the planet and killed life on the ocean floor.

The well-known second event is believed to have been triggered by an asteroid at least 6 miles in diameter slamming into Mexico's Yucatán Peninsula. But new evidence shows that by the time of the asteroid impact, life on the seafloor – mostly species of clams and snails – was already perishing because of the effects of huge volcanic eruptions on the Deccan Plateau in what is now India.

"The eruptions started 300,000 to 200,000 years before the impact, and they may have lasted 100,000 years," said Thomas Tobin, a UW doctoral student in Earth and space sciences.

The eruptions would have filled the atmosphere with fine particles, called aerosols, that initially cooled the planet but, more importantly, they also would have spewed carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases to produce long-term warming that led to the first of the two mass extinctions.

"The aerosols are active on a year to 10-year time scale, while the carbon dioxide has effects on a scale of hundreds to tens of thousands of years," Tobin said.

During the earlier extinction it was primarily life on the ocean floor that died, in contrast to the later extinction triggered by the asteroid impact, which appeared to kill many more free-swimming species.

"The species in the first event are extinct but the groups are all recognizable things you could find around on a beach today," he said.

Tobin is the lead author of a paper in the journal Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology that documents results of research conducted in a fossil-rich area on Seymour Island, off the Antarctic Peninsula.

That particular area has very thick sediment deposits and, for a given interval of time, might contain 10 times more sediment as the well-known Hell Creek Formation in Montana. That means scientists have much greater detail as they try to determine what was happening at the time, Tobin said.

The researchers took small surface core samples from rocks and fossils in the Antarctic sediment and used a method called magnetostratigraphy, employing known changes over time in Earth's magnetic field to determine when the fossils were deposited. The thicker sediment allowed dating to be done more precisely.

"I think the evidence we have from this location is indicative of two separate events, and also indicates that warming took place," Tobin said.

Link.

I have been reading this paper for a bit now and had been planning on doing a write up for some time.  I am going to make a couple very quick comments here, but they ought to be expanded on in a dedicated post.

First, good for Tobin for looking for different signatures for the possible different extinctions!  I don't know ANYONE who has suggested doing that!  ;)

Second, its a bit of caution.  He has a single site that suggests this.  The evidence definitely supports some sort of information to this effect at that site.  However, part of what is so, forgive me, powerful about the Chicxulub Impact theory is that its not just a site that supports the bollide kill theory, but many.  There are several possible scenarios that could produce what Tobin et al find.  If you had the a site that contained dead zones found in the Gulf after the oil disaster (and somewhat before) without any other locales, you might draw the conclusions that the Gulf was experiencing a benthic extinction.  More sites to support the claim ought to be found for this to be well supported.

More later.  Including paper link.

2 comments:

kathleen sisco said...

I am wondering about extinction events and their timing.
I see the Deccan lava flows and wonder about the antipodal hemisphere action at the Yucatan.
I see the South Atlantic Anomaly and wonder about the New Zealand volcanoes in the southern hemisphere.
With the astonishing collapse of the northern hemisphere of the sun in Jan 2012 and the sudden shift right of the N Pole on Earth,
I think: is our sun acting independent hemispherically?
Is the earthquake swarm in Ca a series of gas pockets saturated and exploding?
Did a gas pocket underlying the Cayman Trench blast the Earth off its axis?

Anonymous said...

The regressive-transgressive couplet at the end of the Maastrichtian is a clue to the explanation of this double extinction. Wiki's article 'Maastrichtian marine regression' is not able to give a believable explanation for the regression.