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Scientific News Hypotheses Hypotheses about unusual natural phenomena METHANE ERUPTION BLAMED FOR MASS EXTINCTION
METHANE ERUPTION BLAMED FOR MASS
EXTINCTION
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Did a massive methane bubble from deep
beneath the ocean trigger a mass extinction? |
A massive explosion of colourless,
odourless natural gas erupting from the ocean depths may have caused the worst
mass extinction in the Earth's history some 251 million years ago, according to
U.S. geologists.
In the September issue of Geology,
Associate Professor Gregory Ryskin of Northwestern
University in Illinois contends that an extremely
fast, explosive release of dissolved methane gas could have killed 95% of
Earth's marine species, and some 70% of land animal and plants at the end of the
Permian era - long before dinosaurs lived and died.
According to Ryskin, methane from bacterial decay or from frozen methane
hydrates, continuously produced beneath the ocean floor, accumulated to high
concentrations in the stagnant and deep prehistoric waters.
Just one disturbance - a small meteorite impact, an earthquake or a seafloor
volcano - could have triggered gas-saturated water closer to the surface, where
the gas would have bubbled out. The result would have been a catastrophic
eruption.
"The erupting region would have 'boiled over', ejecting a large amount of
methane and other gases into the atmosphere, and flooding large areas of land,"
Ryskin said.
He added that the explosive mechanism is the same as Cameroon's Lake Nyos
disaster of 1986. That lake erupted, creating a gas-water fountain almost 120 m
high and releasing a lethal cloud of carbon dioxide. A water surge washed up the
shore to a height of more than 24 m.
More energy than nuclear weapons
The situation would have been much worse in the Permian era, he said. Ryskin
calculated that prehistoric oceans could easily have contained enough methane to
liberate an energy about 10,000 times greater than the world's entire nuclear
weapons stockpile going off at once.
Scientists have long wondered what caused the massive extinction, proposing
various possibilities such as an asteroid colliding with Earth, volcanic
eruptions in Siberia or an ancient greenhouse effect.
Ryskin's hypothesis lists seven very different pieces of observational evidence,
including: the extreme rapidity of marine and terrestrial extinctions, a sharp
peak in the atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide, a drastic negative
sulphur and carbon isotope excursion, and the presence in some locations of
metallic and glassy superheated debris particles called microspherules.
"There is no final proof for what I am suggesting, but this is the only
hypothesis that explains all those pieces of evidence at once," Ryskin said.
Similar, smaller-scale eruptions of methane over time could account for other
events and climatic changes, including the Biblical flood, Ryskin added. But
most of all, other sluggish seas might still be accumulating methane at their
depths, representing a future risk.
"I do think that such eruptions will occur in the future, though perhaps
not in the immediate [future], and not on the same scale. I cannot predict the
exact time or location. It is very important to start research in oceanography
to identify methane deposits," Ryskin said.
Methane has already been identified as a cause for catastrophic disasters in
prehistoric times, according to Professor Gerald Dickens of Rice
University in Houston.
"But Ryskin's model is different because he invokes methane stored in deep
water, rather than from terrestrial systems such as peat deposits or gas
hydrates in sediment," Dickens said. "I have not made the mass balance
calculations to evaluate his model, but my gut feeling is that there are some
problems in the amount of methane that can be stored in deep water."
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the ABC
Online News
Publishing date: September 9, 2003
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