The greenhouse gas that saved the world
Chemistry researchers uncover why the archean world was
not frozen solid
18 August 2009
When Planet Earth was just cooling down from its fiery
creation, the sun was faint and young. So faint that it
should not have been able to keep the oceans of earth from
freezing. But fortunately for the creation of life, water
was kept liquid on our young planet. For years scientists
have debated what could have kept earth warm enough to
prevent the oceans from freezing solid. Now a team of
researchers from Tokyo Institute of Technology and
University of Copenhagen's Department of Chemistry have
coaxed an explanation out of ancient rocks, as reported in
this week's issue of PNAS
A perfect greenhouse gas
- "The young sun was approximately 30 percent weaker than
it is now, and the only way to prevent earth from turning
into a massive snowball was a healthy helping of greenhouse
gas," Associate Professor Matthew S. Johnson of the
Department of Chemistry explains. And he has found the most
likely candidate for an archean atmospheric blanket.
Carbonyl Sulphide: A product of the sulphur disgorged during
millennia of volcanic activity.
- "Carbonyl Sulphide is and was the perfect greenhouse
gas. Much better than Carbon Dioxide. We estimate that a
blanket of Carbonyl Sulphide would have provided about 30
percent extra energy to the surface of the planet. And that
would have compensated for what was lacking from the sun",
says Professor Johnson.
Strange distribution
To discover what could have helped the faint young sun
warm early earth, Professor Johnson and his colleagues in
Tokyo examined the ratio of sulphur isotopes in ancient
rocks. And what they saw was a strange signal; A mix of
isotopes that couldn't very well have come from geological
processes.
- "There is really no process in the rocky mantle of
earth that would explain this distribution of isotopes. You
would need something happening in the atmosphere," says
Johnson. The question was what. Painstaking experimentation
helped them find a likely atmospheric process. By
irradiating sulphur dioxide with different wavelengths of
sunlight, they observed that sunlight passing through
Carbonyl Sulphide gave them the wavelengths that produced
the weird isotope mix.
- "Shielding by Carbonyl Sulphide is really a pretty
obvious candidate once you think about it, but until we
looked, everyone had missed it," says Professor Johnson, and
he continues.
- "What we found is really an archaic analogue to the
current ozone layer. A layer that protects us from
ultraviolet radiation. But unlike ozone, Carbonyl Sulphide
would also have kept the planet warm. The only problem is:
It didn't stay warm".
Life caused ice-age
As life emerged on earth it produced increasing amounts
of oxygen. With an increasingly oxidizing atmosphere, the
sulphur emitted by volcanoes was no longer converted to
Carbonyl Sulphide. Instead it got converted to sulphate
aerosols: A powerful climate coolant. Johnson and his
co-workers created a Computer model of the ancient
atmosphere. And the models in conjunction with laboratory
experiments suggest that the fall in levels of Carbonyl
Sulphide and rise of sulphate aerosols taken together would
have been responsible for creating snowball earth, the
planetwide ice-age hypothesised to have taken place near the
end of the Archean eon 2500 million years ago. And the
implications to Johnson are alarming:
- "Our research indicates that the distribution and
composition of atmospheric gasses swung the planet from a
state of life supporting warmth to a planet-wide ice-age
spanning millions of years. I can think of no better reason
to be extremely cautious about the amounts of greenhouse
gasses we are currently emitting to the atmosphere".
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