Friday January 4th… Dear Diary. The main purpose of this ongoing post will be to track United States extreme or record temperatures related to climate change. Any reports I see of ETs will be listed below the main topic of the day. I’ll refer to extreme or record temperatures as ETs (not extraterrestrials)😊.
Lessons To Be Learned From The Permian Extinction
As promised I’ve started to delve into the world of paleoclimatology on this site because we all can learn good lessons from the very distant past when due to natural causes carbon levels in the atmosphere spiked or dramatically lowered. Please see my posts on the Eocene and Pliocene eras: https://guyonclimate.com/2018/12/16/extreme-temperature-diary-december-16th-2018-topic-climate-heading-back-to-the-eocene/ and https://guyonclimate.com/2018/12/15/extreme-temperature-diary-december-15th-2018-topic-the-pliocene-co2-levels-now-mirror-this-past-epoch/.
This morning a new article on the Permian Extinction peaked my interest, which is a big warning and waving finger for our times. Our best science tells us that before the age of Dinosaurs the Permian Extinction was the worst in Earth’s history as far as loss of life and the number of species goes, and very closely related to a spike in atmospheric carbon levels due to a big uptick in volcanic activity: https://news.mongabay.com/2019/01/worst-mass-extinction-event-in-earths-history-was-caused-by-global-warming-analogous-to-current-climate-crisis/
Here is a reprint of this finely written Mongabay article by Mike Gaworecki on 3 January 2019:
The Permian period ended about 250 million years ago with the largest recorded mass extinction in Earth’s history, when a series of massive volcanic eruptions is believed to have triggered global climate change that ultimately wiped out 96 percent of marine species in an event known as the “Great Dying.”
According to Justin Penn, a doctoral student at the University of Washington (UW), the Permian extinction can help us understand the impacts of climate change in our own current era.
Penn led a team of researchers that combined models of ocean conditions and animal metabolism with paleoceanographic records to show that the Permian mass extinction was caused by rising ocean temperatures, which in turn forced the metabolism of marine animals to speed up. Increased metabolism meant increased need for oxygen, but the warmer waters could not hold enough oxygen to meet those needs, and ocean life was left gasping for breath.
New research by scientists at the United States’ University of Washington and Stanford University suggests that the most destructive mass extinction event in Earth’s ancient history was caused by global warming that left marine life unable to breathe.
The Permian period, the last period of the Paleozoic Era, ended about 250 million years ago with the largest recorded mass extinction in Earth’s history. Before the dinosaurs emerged during the Triassic period somewhere around 243 and 233 million years ago, a series of massive volcanic eruptions is believed to have triggered global climate change that ultimately led to the Permian extinction, which wiped out 96 percent of marine species in an event known as the “Great Dying.”
According to Justin Penn, a doctoral student at the University of Washington (UW), the Permian extinction can help us understand the impacts of climate change in our own current era. He’s the lead author of a study published in Science last month that builds off of previous research by Curtis Deutsch, a professor of oceanography at UW.
“In 2015, Curtis published a paper demonstrating that temperature and oxygen act as invisible barriers to habitat for animals in the modern ocean,” Penn told Mongabay. “We wanted to know whether this framework could be used to understand the link between ocean warming, oxygen loss, and marine ecosystems. The end-Permian mass extinction served as the perfect case study because there is clear evidence for ocean warming and oxygen loss during that time period, and the fossils recorded the response of marine biodiversity.”
Penn led a team of researchers that combined models of ocean conditions and animal metabolism with paleoceanographic records to show that the Permian mass extinction was caused by rising ocean temperatures, which in turn forced the metabolism of marine animals to speed up. Increased metabolism meant increased need for oxygen, but the warmer waters could not hold enough oxygen to meet those needs, and ocean life was left gasping for breath.
During the Permian period, Earth’s land masses were still joined together in the supercontinent of Pangaea, and before volcanic eruptions in Siberia increased the concentrations of greenhouse-gas’s in the atmosphere, ocean temperatures and oxygen levels were similar to those of today. The researchers constructed a model based on Earth’s configuration and climate in the Permian, then raised greenhouse gases in the model until ocean surface temperatures in the tropics had risen by 10 degrees Celsius (20 degrees Fahrenheit), the conditions driven by the global warming that was occurring at the time.
CITATION
• Penn, J. L., Deutsch, C., Payne, J. L., & Sperling, E. A. (2018). Temperature-dependent hypoxia explains biogeography and severity of end-Permian marine mass extinction. Science, 362(6419), eaat1327. doi:10.1126/science.aat1327
Once again paleoclimatology warns us about the perils of continuing to spew carbon pollution due to the burning of fossil fuels. Please heed these warnings.
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Here is some more weather and climate news from Friday:
(As usual, this will be a fluid post in which more information gets added during the day as it crosses my radar, crediting all who have put it on-line. Items will be archived on this site for posterity.)
Democrats debate how to face "the existential threat of our time” – climate change, and why this matters so much for 2020: https://t.co/DhaDVOjveP
— Andrew Freedman (@afreedma) January 4, 2019
#Snow cover from the last two winter storms across the Plains from today's MODIS. #winter pic.twitter.com/coNDZMjnRt
— Tom Niziol (@TomNiziol) January 4, 2019
Who wins this snowfall fight? More snow in Dixie than in many traditionally snowy places … so far. 🙃 pic.twitter.com/V5ifFDvYTF
— Greg Postel (@GregPostel) January 4, 2019
Still trying to get un-drenched after 2018? Here's an updated roundup of U.S. states and cities that had their wettest year on record https://t.co/WDyrlXCfHg pic.twitter.com/4bFlqbX7AX
— Weather Underground (@wunderground) January 4, 2019
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The Climate Guy