Underwater asphalt volcanoes discovered in the Pacific Ocean

London, April 27 (ANI): An international team of scientists has discovered underwater asphalt volcanoes that were hidden in the depths of the Pacific Ocean for 40,000 years.

The research, funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF), was a collaboration between scientists from the University of California at Santa Barbara (UCSB), the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), University of California at Davis, University of Sydney and University of Rhode Island.

The largest of these undersea Ice Age volcanoes lies at a depth of 700 feet (220 meters), too deep for scuba diving, which explains why the volcanoes have never before been spotted by humans, pointed out Don Rice, director of NSF”s Chemical Oceanography Program, which funded the research.

Lead author David Valentine, a geoscientist at UCSB, said: “They”re larger than a football-field-long and as tall as a six-story building.

“They”re massive features, and are made completely out of asphalt.”

Valentine and colleagues first viewed the volcanoes during a 2007 dive on the research submersible Alvin.

Valentine credits Ed Keller, an earth scientist at UCSB, with guiding him and colleagues to the site.

He said: “Ed had looked at some bathymetry [sea floor topography] studies conducted in the 1990s and noted some very unusual features.”

Based on Keller”s research, Valentine and other scientists took Alvin into the area in 2007 and discovered the source of the mystery.

Using the sub”s robotic arm, the researchers broke off samples and brought them to labs at UCSB and WHOI for testing.

In 2009, Valentine and colleagues made two more dives to the area in Alvin.

They also conducted a detailed survey of the area using an autonomous underwater vehicle, Sentry, which takes photos as it glides about nine feet above the ocean floor.

Valentine said: “When you ”fly” Sentry over the sea floor, you can see all of the cracking of the asphalt and flow features.

“All the textures are visible of a once-flowing liquid that has solidified in place.

“That”s one of the reasons we”re calling them volcanoes, because they have so many features that are indicative of a lava flow.”

Tests showed that these aren”t typical lava volcanoes, however, found in Hawaii and elsewhere around the Pacific Rim.

Using a mass spectrometer, carbon dating, microscopic fossils, and comprehensive, two-dimensional gas chromatography, the scientists determined that the structures are asphalt.

They were formed when petroleum flowed from the sea-floor about 30,000-40,000 years ago.

Chris Reddy, a scientist at WHOI and a co-author of the paper, said “the volcanoes underscore a little-known fact: half the oil that enters the coastal environment is from natural oil seeps like the ones off the coast of California.”

The researchers also found that the volcanoes were at one time a prolific source of methane, a greenhouse gas.

The two largest volcanoes are about a kilometer apart and have pits or depressions surrounding them.

These pits, according to Valentine, are signs of “methane gas bubbling from the sub-surface.”

That”s not surprising, he said, considering how much petroleum was flowing there in the past.

Valentine said: “They were spewing out a lot of petroleum, but also lots of natural gas…. which you tend to get when you have petroleum seepage in this area.”

The discovery that vast amounts of methane once emanated from the volcanoes caused the scientists to wonder if there might have been an environmental impact on the area during the Ice Age.

Valentine said: “It became a dead zone.

“We”re hypothesizing that these features may have been a major contributor to those events.”

While the volcanoes have been dormant for thousands of years, the 2009 Alvin dive revealed a few spots where gas was still bubbling.

“We think it”s residual gas,” said Valentine, adding that the amount of gas is so small it”s harmless, and never reaches the surface.

The study has appeared in a paper published on-line this week in the journal Nature Geoscience. (ANI)

Volcano helped dinos gain upper hand in battle for global dominance 200 mln yrs ago

Sydney, March 23 (ANI): In a new study, scientists have confirmed that a massive volcanic eruption and the loss of half of Earth’s plant life 200 million years ago tipped the scales in favour of the dinosaurs over crocodiles in the battle for global dominance.

The idea is not new, but connecting the eruption to a 200-million-year-old mass extinction event has not been easy.

Now, according to a report in ABC Science, that link has been confirmed in a new study that looked at ancient plant substances and other evidence in lake and ocean sediments from both sides of the 9 million-square-kilometre Central Atlantic Magmatic Province (CAMP) eruption zone, better known nowadays as the Atlantic Ocean.

“We weren’t convinced that volcanism caused the extinctions,” said palaeobiologist Assistant Professor Jessica Whiteside of Brown University.

But that all changed when she and her colleagues found and accurately dated some unusual changes in the kind of carbon available to plants during the eruption.

“We actually did a complete 180,” she said.

Lake sediments to the west of the eruption in New England contain leaf waxes, pollen, wood and other plant materials that record what sorts of carbon was being incorporated by plants from the atmosphere during the eruption.

The sediments are particularly useful because they – as well as some ocean sediments of the same age in England – are physically interwoven with some of the earliest lava from the giant eruption.

So their overlap in time is undeniable.

“I think they’ve tied into a very nice section (of sediments), so they have very good timing for this thing,” said Earth scientist Professor Michael Rampino of New York University.

In fact their resolution is about 20,000 years, which is pretty good considering the 200 million years that have passed since the events took place.

An analysis of the plant material suggests there was a rapid and dramatic rise in climate-warming carbon compounds in the atmosphere.

That warming likely caused die-offs, as well as new opportunities that early dinosaurs were apparently in a good position to exploit.

“The CAMP eruption itself was very long-lived, and as such was unlikely to have released enough of the gases in short order to cause a rapid climate change,” said Rampino.

What’s more, the carbon that made it into the atmosphere, as shown by Whiteside, was primarily carbon-13.

That’s important because that is the lighter-weight isotope of carbon, which is associated not with volcanic eruptions but with living things. (ANI)

5 last-ditch schemes to prevent global warming disaster (Re-Issue)

Washington, September 6 (ANI): A new study by the United Kingdom’s Royal Society has outlined five last-ditch schemes needed to prevent a global warming disaster.

According to National Geographic News, United Kingdom’s Royal Society’s report is the first from a major scientific body devoted to ranking the various proposals for “geoengineering.”

“It is an unpalatable truth that unless we can succeed in greatly reducing (greenhouse gas) emissions, we are headed for a very uncomfortable and challenging climate future,” said study leader John Shepherd, an earth scientist at the University of Southampton in England, in a statement.

Should that future arrive, the society reluctantly recommends seriously considering the following five global-cooling ideas.

Volcanic eruptions can quickly cool the planet by spewing tiny droplets containing sulfur dioxide into the atmosphere, where they reflect some of the sun’s rays back into space.

Researchers have proposed fighting global warming with their own “flying volcanoes”-jets or balloons that release similar droplets.

Millions of tons of these droplets would need to be sent into the air every year to cancel out current global warming, at a cost of tens of billions of US dollars, the report estimates.

Even so, the flying volcanoes would be one of the most cost-effective types of geoengineering.

Another idea is the use of computer-controlled ships that could ply the remote seas, pumping out seawater mist, which would encourage low, thick clouds to form. The clouds would reflect sunlight back into space.

It would cost more than a billion dollars to launch a fleet of a few hundred of these ships, according to the new study, a relatively small sum, as geoengineering costs go.

Scientists also propose to put huge mirrors or thin, reflective disks in orbit alongside Earth and block solar rays.

The approaches would be safe, with little in the way of side effects, according to the Royal Society.

The study also determined that since trees pull huge amounts of carbon dioxide (CO2) out of the air, planting more forests would be one of the most cost-effective ways of getting the gas out of the air. nother proposal to prevent a global warming disaster is dissolving mountains of rock, which would speed up the natural process of rock weathering, as a way of absorbing CO2.

A big operation for artificial rock weathering would need big mines, and a lot of electricity to chemically split seawater to make an acid that would be sprayed over the rocks. (ANI)

5 last-ditch schemes to prevent global warming disaster

Washington, September 5 (ANI): A new study by the United Kingdom’s Royal Society has outlined five last-ditch schemes needed to prevent a global warming disaster.

According to National Geographic News, United Kingdom’s Royal Society’s report is the first from a major scientific body devoted to ranking the various proposals for “geoengineering.”

“It is an unpalatable truth that unless we can succeed in greatly reducing (greenhouse gas) emissions, we are headed for a very uncomfortable and challenging climate future,” said study leader John Shepherd, an earth scientist at the University of Southampton in England, in a statement.

Should that future arrive, the society reluctantly recommends seriously considering the following five global-cooling ideas.

Volcanic eruptions can quickly cool the planet by spewing tiny droplets containing sulfur dioxide into the atmosphere, where they reflect some of the sun’s rays back into space.

Researchers have proposed fighting global warming with their own “flying volcanoes”-jets or balloons that release similar droplets.

Millions of tons of these droplets would need to be sent into the air every year to cancel out current global warming, at a cost of tens of billions of US dollars, the report estimates.

Even so, the flying volcanoes would be one of the most cost-effective types of geoengineering.

Another idea is the use of computer-controlled ships that could ply the remote seas, pumping out seawater mist, which would encourage low, thick clouds to form. The clouds would reflect sunlight back into space.

It would cost more than a billion dollars to launch a fleet of a few hundred of these ships, according to the new study, a relatively small sum, as geoengineering costs go.

Scientists also propose to put huge mirrors or thin, reflective disks in orbit alongside Earth and block solar rays.

The approaches would be safe, with little in the way of side effects, according to the Royal Society.

The study also determined that since trees pull huge amounts of carbon dioxide (CO2) out of the air, planting more forests would be one of the most cost-effective ways of getting the gas out of the air.

Another proposal to prevent a global warming disaster is dissolving mountains of rock, which would speed up the natural process of rock weathering, as a way of absorbing CO2.

A big operation for artificial rock weathering would need big mines, and a lot of electricity to chemically split seawater to make an acid that would be sprayed over the rocks. (ANI)

Man-made volcanoes may cool Earth by reflecting sunlight back into space

London, August 30 (ANI): The Royal Society in London seems to be convinced that man-made volcanoes can help stave off climate change, as it is backing research into simulated volcanic eruptions that will spray millions of tons of dust into the air to cool the Earth.

This week, the society will call for a global programme of studies into geo-engineering, which can help devise new ways to manipulate the planet’s climate to counteract global warming.

It believes that pouring sulphur-based particles into the upper atmosphere may help keep the planet cool.

Ken Caldeira, an earth scientist at Stanford University, California, and a member of a Royal Society working group on geo-engineering, said that dust sprayed into the stratosphere in volcanic eruptions could cool the Earth by reflecting light back into space.

“If I had a dollar for geo-engineering research I would put 90 cents of it into stratospheric aerosols and 10 cents into everything else,” Times Online quoted Caldeira as saying.

The intervention by the Royal Society comes amid tension ahead of the United Nations-sponsored climate talks in Copenhagen in December to agree global cuts in carbon dioxide emissions.

The Royal Society’s decision to take geo-engineering seriously is a measure of the desperation felt by scientists about climate change.

Brian Launder, a professor at Manchester University, who is also on the working group, recently said that without CO2 reductions or geo-engineering “civilisation as we know it will end within our grandchildren’s lifetime”.

“The only rational scheme is to reduce the sunlight reaching Earth and to reflect back more of it,” he said.

The society’s report is expected to draw partly on research by Tim Lenton, professor of earth sciences at the University of East Anglia, who has just completed the first big comparison of different forms of geo-engineering.

“We estimate that 1.5-5m tons of sulphate particles could be released (artificially) into the stratosphere each year on a recurring basis. This is quite a small amount, which makes it potentially economically viable, but it could reduce global temperature rise by up to 2C,” said Lenton. (ANI)

Tsunami hit New York City 2,300 years ago

London, May 4 (ANI): Scientists have come up with a scenario that suggests a huge tsunami crashed into the New York City region 2,300 years ago, dumping sediment and shells across Long Island and New Jersey and casting wood debris far up the Hudson River.

According to a report by BBC News, Steven Goodbred, an Earth scientist at Vanderbilt University, said that it may have been a large storm, but evidence is increasingly pointing to a rare Atlantic Ocean tsunami.

He said that large gravel, marine fossils and other unusual deposits found in sediment cores across the area date to 2,300 years ago.

The size and distribution of material would require a high velocity wave and strong currents to move it, and it is unlikely that short bursts produced in a storm would suffice, he explained.

“If we’re wrong, it was one heck of a storm,” said Goodbred.

According to Goodbred, the New York wave was on the Grand Banks scale – three to four metres high and big enough to leap over the barrier islands; but that it did not reach the magnitude of the 2004 Sumatran tsunami.

He first proposed the link between the layers of unusual debris found in sediment cores and a tsunami while studying shellfish populations in Great South Bay, Long Island.

He extracted many mud cores with incongruous 20cm layers of sand and gravel.

Their age matched that of wood deposits buried in the Hudson riverbed and marine fossils in a New Jersey debris flow in cores gathered by other researchers.

“The fist-sized gravel he found in Long Island would require a high velocity of water – well over a metre per second – to land where it did,” said Goodbred.

Among the fossils and shells sandwiched in the organic black mud of Sandy Hook Bay, New Jersey, Marine Geologist Cecilia McHugh of Queens College, City University of New York, discovered mud balls made from red clay that matched iron-rich sediments found onshore.

“The balls form their spherical shape only through vigorous reworking, and they do not form in small storms,” said Dr McHugh.

“I didn’t think much about it until we dated the deposit and came up with the same date that Steve did on Long Island,” she said.

According to Driscoll, to rule out the possibility of a severe storm, tsunami groups should collect more core samples to see whether the distribution of the debris is consistent. (ANI)