MIT professor of geophysics Daniel Rothman stands next to part of the Xiakou formation in China
A team of researchers from MIT may have found new evidence to shed light on the cause of the most devastating mass extinction in the history of our planet. The event, estimated to have taken place around 252 million years ago, was responsible for the extinction of roughly 90 percent of all life on Earth.
The team’s research indicates that the catastrophic event was in fact triggered by the tiniest of organisms, a methane-releasing microbe called Methanosarcina. New evidence suggests that at the time of the extinction, the microbes appeared in massive numbers across the world’s oceans, spreading vast clouds of the carbon-heavy gas methane into the atmosphere. This had the effect of altering the planet’s climate in a way that made it inhospitable to most other forms of life inhabiting Earth at that time.
It was previously believed that the mass extinction, known as the end-Permian extinction, was due to either vast amounts of volcanic activity, a devastating asteroid strike or prolific all-consuming coal fires. Any of these events could have caused the mass deaths, however there are inconsistencies in the evidence that point away from the traditional theories and towards the new findings presented by the researchers from MIT…
Although the team does not believe that…heightened levels of volcanism were responsible for the extinction itself, they do believe that it could have been the catalyst. The sudden and devastating increase in carbon-containing gases present during the end-Permian extinction is put down to a massive bloom of Methanosarcina. However, for this bloom to take place, the microbes would require an abundant source of carbon and nickel, both of which were discovered in a new analysis of sediments in China, and could have been distributed widely through a volcanic eruption.
The case for Methanosarcina being responsible for the extinction is further strengthened by the team’s findings that, at the time of the end-Permian extinction, the microbes had undergone a genetic transfer from another microbe. This is what gave the Methanosarcina the ability to produce methane at such a prolific rate.
With the catalyst of volcanic activity, the Methanosarcina were able to spread across our planet’s oceans unchecked. This allowed the microbes to produce vast quantities of carbon-containing methane, by harvesting the now carbon- and nickel-rich water. The release of said methane would have had the effect of raising the carbon dioxide levels in the waters, causing ocean acidification, irrevocably altering the ecosystem.
Let us hope no natural occurrence allows us to experiment firsthand with the hypothesis.
Of course, if such a cataclysm initiated, we can count on the usual assembly of know-nothings to stand around – doing their best to interfere with any attempt to save the species of Earth – while the rest of us die trying.
doesn’t this sound convenient for scientists complicit in the exponential death of biology
So much for earth being “fine-tuned for intelligent life”!
Only in Cincinnati.
Cincinnati Ohio?
Creation Museum/Intelligent Design horseshit
…I thought it might have had to do with the Goetta.
Regards the historical consequences of a massive release of methane into atmosphere, a recent news item (7/31/14): “Vast methane plumes spotted bubbling up from the Arctic Ocean floor” http://www.theweathernetwork.com/news/articles/vast-methane-plumes-spotted-bubbling-up-from-the-arctic-ocean-floor/33078/ See also “New research on ocean acidification threat and recalling some political history” (8/1/14) @ http://www.climatesciencewatch.org/2014/08/01/new-research-on-ocean-acidification-threat-and-recalling-some-political-history/
“Ancient Lava Caves in Hawai’i Are Teeming With Mysterious Life Forms” https://www.sciencealert.com/hawaii-s-ancient-lava-caves-are-teeming-with-microbial-dark-matter see also
“According to a new estimate, there are about one trillion species of microbes on Earth, and 99.999 percent of them have yet to be discovered” https://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/24/science/one-trillion-microbes-on-earth.html