When the Earth Froze
The rocks tell us that at least twice, the earth has frozen over from the poles to the equator
- By James Trefil
- Smithsonian magazine, December 1999, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
"The big hole in the [snowball earth] theory right now is understanding how you get the earth to freeze over," he says. An asteroid impact could do it, by throwing up a worldwide layer of dust that would shade and thus cool the planet, but to Schrag this seems an unlikely scenario if snowball events happened repeatedly. Most scientists assume that the freezing had something to do with the levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Just as adding carbon dioxide can make a planet warm up, removing it can make it cool down. Currently, there is some argument about how low carbon dioxide levels have to be to initiate freezing, but there is a general consensus that low levels are the culprit.
So, should we all start investing in snowmobiles and parkas? Could there be a snowball in our future?
The answers, of course, depend on what we think caused snowballs in the past. The scientists I talked to didn't seem too concerned — after all, it's been about 600 million years since the earth has had this sort of problem. Everyone noted that the sun was 6 to 7 percent dimmer back in those days.
What interests me most is the question of how any living thing survived the event. When I ask scientists about this, they become a little evasive. Remember, though, that at this time life on earth was confined to the ocean, and consisted predominantly of single-celled organisms. If you think of a planet populated exclusively by green pond scum, you won't be far off. It's possible that photosynthetic algae could have survived in localized warm refuges (around undersea volcanoes, for example), in water trapped in spongy ice, or in seasonal meltwater lakes near the tropics. Life can survive in these sorts of environments in today's Antarctica. But which of these escape routes life actually took, or whether it used a different, as yet unimagined strategy, is a question for future research.
Daniel Schrag points out one interesting thing about the relation between snowball events and life. "Multicelled life on earth developed soon after the last snowball ended," he says, "and there is some (equivocal) evidence that it tried to start up between snowballs, only to be wiped out each time." It may be, in other words, that only single-celled life can survive such total freezes and that the development of complex life-forms had to wait until they no longer occurred.
Only when the freezes stopped did evolution produce beings so complex that they can read the story in the rocks and tell us that the earth was once much different from what it is today.
By James Trefil
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Comments (2)
Actually, the Earth rotated faster in the past, and the rotation rate continues to slow down. This is due to the presence of the Moon: the Moon steals the Earth's rotational energy and is thereby gradually being lifted into a higher orbit. Eventually in the far future, the Earth and the Moon will rotate at the same angular rate. As to why we had Snowball Earth - I have no informed idea. Although asteroid impacts would be my first guess. It reminds us that the wonderful biosphere we have now did not always exist.
Posted by Jonathan on January 3,2013 | 02:11 PM
I think billions of years ago when the earth was called "snowball earth" the earth rotation was slower than today. What made the started spewing lava and having volcanic activity is due to its rotation faster than before. Think of earth like generator or a mother. When the motor is spinning its normal rotation it doesn't get hot but when the motor is increases is rpm more twice its normal RPM, the motor or stator gets hot. The earth must be pushed closer to the sun by a collision with a huge meteor or fast moving object to speed up it's rotation. The rotation of could be like a bike gear the smaller the gear the faster the gear spins. So earth could be compared in its orbital place with the sun the rotation heats up the earth core. I am not a physicist or a scientist. Its just and observation or a theory why the snowball earth become as it is today.
Posted by Tony Norona Jr on September 3,2012 | 09:42 AM