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Study casts doubt on 'Snowball Earth' theory
September 30, 2005
Remains of photosynthesizing microbes in prehistoric rocks suggest Earth was not ice-bound A study that applied innovative techniques to previously unexamined rock formations has turned up strong evidence on the "Slushball Earth" side of a decades-long scientific argument.
The study appears in the Sept. 29 Science Express. The lead author is Alison Olcott, a Ph.D. student of earth sciences in the USC College of Letters, Arts and Sciences.
Geologists agree that prehistoric Earth was locked in a deep freeze during Precambrian times, about 750 to 600 million years ago. They disagree over the severity of the glaciation.
"Snowball Earth" proponents, who say that Earth's oceans were covered by thick ice, explain the survival of life by hypothesizing the existence of small warm spots, or refugia.
On the other side are supporters of a "Slushball Earth" that would have included large areas of thin ice or open ocean, particularly around the equator.
The debate has tended to revolve around the same rock samples and analytical techniques, Olcott said. So she and her team focused on a drill core of little-known black shale deposits from southeastern Brazil and applied lipid biomarker techniques to identify prehistoric organisms based on the fatty remains of their cell membranes.
The team, which included scientists from USC, Caltech, the University of Maryland and a Brazilian mining company, identified "a complex and productive microbial ecosystem," including photosynthesizing organisms that could not have existed under a thick layer of ice.
"If there was ice, it had to have been thin enough that organisms could photosynthesize below it or within it," Olcott said.
Frank Corsetti of the USC College, one of Olcott's advisers and a co-author on the paper, said: "What she has provided is the first real evidence that substantial photosynthesis occurred in the Earth's oceans during the extreme ice age 700 million years ago, which is a challenge for the snowball theory."
The evidence from the drill core does not prove that large parts of the ocean remained free of sheet ice during the pre-Cambrian glaciation. It is statistically unlikely but possible, Olcott said, that the drill core found one of the tiny "refugia" for marine life whose existence is allowed under the "Snowball Earth" hypothesis.
But, she said, "finding the one anomalous spot would be quite unlikely," adding that the drill core came from an extensive formation of rocks with similar characteristics.
"At what point does an enormous refugium become open ocean?" she asked.
Skeptics also may argue that the rocks do not necessarily date to a glacial era, Olcott said. But her team found evidence of glacial activity in the samples, such as dropstones (continental rocks dropped by melting glaciers into marine deposits) and glendonites (minerals that only form in near-freezing water).
Objections aside, the paper's main contribution may be the application of new techniques to an old chestnut.
"Geologists don't necessarily think of looking for traces of microbes left in the rocks. This is the first direct look at the ecosystem during this time period," said Olcott, who credited USC's geobiology program, one of a handful in the country, with influencing her thinking.
"They really try to synthesize between geology and biology. It was a new way to attack the problem."
Corsetti agrees. "The climate of collaboration between geologists and biologists," he said, "is unusually good at USC it was this way of thinking that provided the impetus for the project in the first place."
University of Southern California
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Snowball Earth: The Story of a Maverick Scientist and His Theory of the Global Catastrophe That Spawned Life As We Know It
by Gabrielle Walker (Author)
Did the Earth once undergo a super ice age, one that froze the entire planet from the poles to the equator? In Snowball Earth, gifted writer Gabrielle Walker has crafted an intriguing global adventure story, following maverick scientist Paul Hoffman’s quest to prove a theory so audacious and profound that it is shaking the world of earth sciences to its core.
In lyrical prose that brings each remote and alluring locale vividly to life, Walker takes us on a thrilling natural history expedition to witness firsthand the supporting evidence Hoffman has pieced together. That evidence, he argues, shows that 700 million years ago the Earth did indeed freeze over completely, becoming a giant “snowball,” in the worst climatic catastrophe in history. Even more startling is his...
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Snowball Earth
by Gabrielle Walker (Author)
Did the Earth once undergo a super ice age, one that froze the entire planet? A global adventure story and a fascinating account of scientist Paul Hoffman's quest to prove his maverick 'Snowball Earth' theory, this is science writing at its most gripping. In "Snowball Earth", Gabrielle Walker takes us on a thrilling natural history expedition in search of supporting evidence for the audacious theory which argues that the Earth experienced a climatic cataclysm 600 million years ago that froze the entire planet from the poles to the equator. Because the global snowball happened so long ago the ice has now long gone - but it left its traces in rocks around the world and in order to see the evidence, Walker visited such places as Australia, Namibia, South Africa and Death Valley, USA. Part...
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Reading the Rocks: The Autobiography of the Earth
by Marcia Bjornerud (Author)
For readers of John McPhee and Stephen Jay Gould, this engaging armchair guide to the making of the rock record shows how to understand messages written in stone. To many of us, the Earth's crust is a relic of ancient, unknowable history. But to a geologist, stones are richly illustrated narratives, telling gothic tales of cataclysm and reincarnation. For more than four billion years, in beach sand, granite, and garnet schists, the planet has kept a rich and idiosyncratic journal of its past. Fulbright Scholar Marcia Bjornerud takes the reader along on an eye-opening tour of Deep Time, explaining in elegant prose what we see and feel beneath our feet. Both scientist and storyteller, Bjornerud uses anecdotes and metaphors to remind us that our home is a living...
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Earth
by John Dickey (Author)
From the formation of the solar system, 4.6 billion years ago, to the fate of the Sun as a fading white dwarf, six billion years from today, Earth: A Narrative in Verse recounts the epic of Earth's evolution in 44 cantos that document the struggle of irrepressible Life with inevitable Death. Astronomy, geology and biology are melded in poems that employ and celebrate the sounds and symbols of science to describe the formation of planets, tectonic motions, climate change, catastrophic happenings, and the odyssey of terrestrial Life from single cells to complex organisms and finally back to single cells, the last earthlings. Sobering yet uplifting, the work presents Earth in the context of universal time and space.
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Snowball Earth: The Story of the Great Global Catastrophe that Spawned Life as We Know It [Japanese Edition]
by Gabrielle Walker (Author)
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Miracle Planet (DVD Box Set)
Starring: Christopher Plummer Directed By: Hideki Tasuke
Miracle Planet is a five-part series that recounts the profound and gripping story of Earth's mysterious evolution. Narrated by Christopher Plummer , it reveals the surprising role that sheer chance has played in the development of life. Over its more than 4-billion-year history, Earth has been home to repeated violent climactic changes, which have caused mass extinctions. And yet, life has survived. In fact, these same catastrophes that devastated life on Earth also helped bring about its evolution from the simplest microbes to the complexity and diversity that is found on the planet todayFilmed in High Definition this series features location footage, interviews with the world's foremost scientists and cutting-edge computer technology. Programs in this series: The Violent...
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![The relationship between the Neoproterozoic Noonday Dolomite and the Ibex Formation: New observations and their bearing on 'snowball Earth' [An article from: Earth Science Reviews]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51989XH4RPL._SL160_.jpg)
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The relationship between the Neoproterozoic Noonday Dolomite and the Ibex Formation: New observations and their bearing on 'snowball Earth' [An article from: Earth Science Reviews]
by F.A. Corsetti (Author), A.J. Kaufman (Author)
This digital document is a journal article from Earth Science Reviews, published by Elsevier in . The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Description: The Neoproterozoic Ibex Formation (Death Valley region, California) is commonly interpreted as a coeval basinal facies to the Noonday Dolomite carbonate platform. However, in some areas (e.g., the Black Mountains, Death Valley), the Ibex Formation is found to rest on the eroded surface of the lower Noonday Dolomite and older units. Sediment-filled grikes root from the top of the eroded lower Noonday Dolomite, followed by the subsequent deposition of the Ibex Formation. Thus, the lower Noonday Dolomite is not...
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Frozen in time: concepts of 'global glaciation' from 1837 (die Eiszeit) to 1998 (the Snowball Earth).: An article from: Geoscience Canada
by Nicholas Eyles (Author)
This digital document is an article from Geoscience Canada, published by Geological Association of Canada on December 1, 2004. The length of the article is 9043 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details Title: Frozen in time: concepts of 'global glaciation' from 1837 (die Eiszeit) to 1998 (the Snowball Earth). Author: Nicholas Eyles Publication: Geoscience Canada (Refereed) Date: December 1, 2004 Publisher: Geological Association of Canada Volume: 31 Issue: 4 Page: 157(10)
Distributed by Thomson...
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![The biotic response to Neoproterozoic snowball Earth [An article from: Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/516708A3WQL._SL160_.jpg)
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The biotic response to Neoproterozoic snowball Earth [An article from: Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology]
by F.A. Corsetti (Author), A.N. Olcott (Author), C. Bakermans (Author)
This digital document is a journal article from Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, published by Elsevier in . The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Description: The commonly held notion among earth scientists that Neoproterozoic low latitude glaciation (ca. 720-585 Ma), sometimes referred to as snowball Earth, caused major extinctions and imparted important evolutionary consequences upon the biosphere is not supported by the microfossil record. In particular, silicified microfossils from pre- and syn-glacial units in the Death Valley region, California, reveal little change during the glacial interval; in fact, the syn-glacial microbiota is...
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Snowball Earth: Snowball Earth, Europa (moon), Interglacial, Douglas Mawson, Milankovitch cycles, Dropstone, Diamictite, Banded iron formation, Varve
by Frederic P. Miller (Editor), Agnes F. Vandome (Editor), John McBrewster (Editor)
Snowball Earth. Europa (moon), Interglacial, Douglas Mawson, Milankovitch cycles, Dropstone, Diamictite, Banded iron formation, Varve, Neoproterozoic
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