"Seawater chemistry is characterized by long phases of stability,
which are interrupted by short intervals of rapid change," says
Professor Ulrich Wortmann in the Department of Earth Sciences at the
University of Toronto, lead author of a study to be published in Science
this week. "We've established a new framework that helps us better
interpret evolutionary trends and climate change over long periods of
time. The study focuses on the past 130 million years, but similar
interactions have likely occurred through the past 500 million years."
Wortmann and co-author Adina Paytan of the Institute of Marine
Sciences at the University of California Santa Cruz point to the
collision between India and Eurasia approximately 50 million years ago
as one example of an interval of rapid change. This collision enhanced
dissolution of the most extensive belt of water-soluble gypsum on Earth,
stretching from Oman to Pakistan, and well into Western India --
remnants of which are well exposed in the Zagros mountains.
The authors suggest that the dissolution or creation of such massive
gyspum deposits will change the sulfate content of the ocean, and that
this will affect the amount of sulfate aerosols in the atmosphere and
thus climate. "We propose that times of high sulfate concentrations in
ocean water correlate with global cooling, just as times of low
concentration correspond with greenhouse periods," says Paytan.
"When India and Eurasia collided, it caused dissolution of ancient
salt deposits which resulted in drastic changes in seawater chemistry,"
Paytan continues. "This may have led to the demise of the Eocene epoch
-- the warmest period of the modern-day Cenozoic era -- and the
transition from a greenhouse to icehouse climate, culminating in the
beginning of the rapid expansion of the Antarctic ice sheet."
The researchers combined data of past seawater sulfur composition,
assembled by Paytan in 2004, with Wortmann's recent discovery of the
strong link between marine sulfate concentrations and carbon and
phosphorus cycling. They were able to explain the seawater sulfate
isotope record as a result of massive changes to the accumulation and
weathering of gyspum -- the mineral form of hydrated calcium sulfate.
"While it has been known for a long time that gyspum deposits can be
formed and destroyed rapidly, the effect of these processes on seawater
chemistry has been overlooked," says Wortmann. "The idea represents a
paradigm shift in our understanding of how ocean chemistry changes over
time and how these changes are linked to climate."
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