The History of Air
Paleontologists are looking to the fossil record to decipher what the earth's atmosphere was like hundreds of millions of years ago
- By Brian Switek
- Smithsonian.com, April 19, 2010, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Though these changes to the atmosphere greatly pruned the evolutionary tree 251 million years ago, they did not make the planet permanently inhospitable. Life continued to evolve, and levels of oxygen, carbon dioxide and other gases continued to fluctuate, spurring the climate from “hothouse” to “icehouse” states numerous times.
The earth may now be entering a new hothouse era, but what is unique about the present is that humans are taking an active role in shaping the air. The appetite for fossil fuels is altering the atmosphere in a way that will change the climate, adding more carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases to the mix, and these fluctuations could have major implications for both extinction and evolution.
The earth’s present conditions are different enough from those of the Late Permian that a similar catastrophe is unlikely, but the more we learn about ancient climates, the more clear it is that sudden changes in the atmosphere can be deadly. A recent study led by biogeochemist Natalia Shakhova, of the International Arctic Research Center, suggests that we may be approaching a tipping point that could quickly ramp up the global warming that is already altering ecosystems around the world. An immense store of methane, one of the most potent greenhouse gases, lies beneath the permafrost of the East Siberian Arctic Shelf. The permafrost acts as a frozen cap over the gas, but Shakhova found that that the cap has a leak. Scientists aren’t sure whether the methane leak is normal or a recent product of global warming, but if current projections are correct, as the global climate warms, sea level will rise and flood the East Siberian Arctic Shelf, which will melt the permafrost and release even more of the gas. As more greenhouse gases build up, the planet inches ever closer to this and other possible tipping points that could trigger rapid changes to habitats all over the world.
Perhaps the peculiar conditions that allowed giant arthropods to fly through air composed of 35 percent oxygen will never be repeated, and we can hope that the earth does not replay the catastrophe at the end of the Permian, but in fostering a hothouse climate our species is actively changing the history of life on earth. How these changes will affect us, as well as the rest of the world’s biodiversity, will eventually be recorded in the ever-expanding fossil record.
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Comments (6)
Steve, all you have to do is look up and see if Oxygen is denser than the other gases in our atmosphere. Than you'll know if a higher percentage of oxygen will increase air pressure. Also the article was saying that larger Flying arthropods would benefit from higher air pressure as it would make their method of flying more effective and so capable of getting the heavier body off the ground given the structure of their bodies/wings etc. NOT that it made all arthropods buoyant and less heavy.
Posted by Beth on February 1,2012 | 12:51 PM
An interesting article, however, I am curious as to the basis for the statement in the fourth paragraph that: "The fact that the oxygen would have increased the air pressure". Having never seen a reference to this anywhere else, I am not convinced that the higher percentage of atmospheric oxygen would result in substantially higher air pressure. Nor does it hold that the higher air pressure would allow for large sizes due to "structural" capabilities, unless these creatures somehow became buoyant.
Please let me know if there are other references that might clear this up for me.
Posted by Steve Hedrick on May 11,2010 | 09:19 PM
An excellent hypothesis on the extinction on a Grand scale of life on this planet, it pretty well rounds off all the other theories the only one missing is Alien abduction.
Nonetheless Patricia while you are rejoicing at the positive impact of your heritage please also remember the old story as follows..."drop a frog in boiling water and it will jump for freedom", slowly heat up the water and it will boil to death without moving, no this isnt a french recipe for our Amphibian friends but rather an analogy which may easily be compared with the current state of the environment on this planet and its current inhabitants. Having said that and based on research I have read, drastic (In our eyes) climatic changes are a part of this planet, which Patricia, America didnt build and America doesnt own, so hopefully we(The human race) will have enough collective intelligence and morality not to hasten our own demise, bearing in mind who will suffer, specifically our children etcetera etcetera
Posted by Lindsay on May 3,2010 | 12:30 AM
We are injecting gigatons (Giga means billions!) of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere at an accelerating rate. While scientists are cautious in projecting the results of their models and climate research, it is now almost certain these gases will have an effect rivaling or even surpassing any current natural phenomena like the Eyjafjallajökull volcano. Patricia, you allude to America's can do spirit in your comment. I would like us to harness that to face these problems now, instead of coming up with increasingly ridiculous reasons for stuffing our heads in the sand. I worry that people are hardening their opinions because of some ideological rigidity and blindness. The liberals, or environmentalists, or stuck-up scientists are for it, so it must be a lie. Climate change will strike at liberal and conservative, truck driver and scientist, hippie and square alike. This a problem that can only be solved if we all get involved.
Posted by Ben on April 26,2010 | 05:33 PM
Excellent article, but did you know that the Joggins Fossil Cliffs are the best place in the world to see fossils from the Carboniferous period?
Inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 2008, the cliffs are renowned for having upright lycopsid trees still embedded in them, where they once grew 300 million years ago.
Here, you can see footprints of those early creatures, including the arthropleura and the tetrapods, see fossils of dragonflies and reptiles, including the earliest known amniote; Hylonomus Lyelli.
The fossil cliffs of Joggins are mentioned in On the Origin of Species by Darwin and continue today to reveal their mysteries, thanks to the Bay of Fundy tides, the highest in the world.
For more information visit www.jogginsfossilcliffs.net
Posted by Joggins Fossil Cliffs UNESCO World Heritage Site on April 22,2010 | 02:31 PM
The Icelandic volcanic eruptions are no doubt not as threatening to our ecosystem as the Siberian Traps, which seem to have been the extinction trigger for the Permian era ecosystem. Nevertheless, the recent drastic effects of the Icelandic eruptions should serve as a reminder that it takes far more than car exhaust, coal-fueled power plants, and fireplace gasses to even approach the ecological effects of natural forces. We can not prevent massive volcanoes, continental earthquakes, and the normal extinction of many species during every ecological era. When our own extinction trigger appears, I have no doubt it will arrive as have other triggers: suddenly, drasticly, and obviously caused by a universally agreed upon source. Until then, I will rejoice in America's historical genius in creating prosperity, leisure, and progress for its citizens.
Posted by Patricia White on April 22,2010 | 02:08 PM