Snowball Earth: Testing the Limits of Climate Change
Paul
Hoffman (Department of Earth & Planetary Sciences,
Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA)
Dept. of Geol. Sci., Ohio State University, Columbus,
Ohio, USA
15 November 2001
Joe
Kirschvink of Caltech came up with the Snowball Earth hypothesis in 1992.
Namibia
- where most of the original evidence came from. New places from which
evidence comes include Spitsbergen, nw Canada (Mackenzie Mts.), Mauritania,
Australia.
The
Pleistocene ice advances reach about the same maxima and then snap back each
time - are they the biggest glaciations ever? The Pleistocene glaciations
were the largest during the entire Phanerozoic. There were dozens of ice
advances in the last 2-3 m.y., not 2 or 3 advances.
Fragmentary
evidence for glacial events are known for the Paleoproterozoic and there is
well known and better evidence of glaciation in the Neoproterozoic. Both
appear to have had 100-200 m.y. durations, and both had multiple glacial
events. There was a 1.5 b.y. ice-age gap between them.
The
Neoproterozoic glaciations seem to have occurred from ~780-580 m.y., although
the interval could be as short as 100 m.y. At least two glaciations
occurred then, possibly four or five in the Neoproterozoic interval.
Douglas
Mawson was the first to suggest the possibility of superglaciations.
Mawson is best known for his 1907-1920 work in Antarctica. In a 15 July
1948 talk by Mawson, he proposed that the late Precambrian ice age was a global
ice age, and the disappearance of the ice age resulted in the explosion of
fossils we see at the beginning of the Paleozoic. See J. Proc. Roy.
Soc. NSW 82: 150-174 (1949).
Mackenzie
Mountains - 200 meters worth of diamictite is sandwiched between carbonates
(with sharp contacts). Carbonate rocks are usually low-latitude &
warm-water deposits. Ice sheets were running across pure carbonate
shelves. Another general feature of the Neoproterozoic glaciation is the
abruptness of the end of the interval and the immediate deposition of overlying
carbonates, with no evidence of erosion in between. This is a universally
observed, sudden transition from glaciation to warm water carbonate
deposition. The overlying carbonate rocks are called cap
carbonates. Cap carbonates are usually thick successions, representing
deepwater facies (10s to 100s of meters of water). The depth was created
by the glacial event & got rapidly filled in by carbonates.
These
Neoproterozoic glacial deposits are widespread - they are known in North
America, South America, Africa, Arabia, Europe, Asia, Australia, Greenland,
Scandinavia, China, Siberia, central Asia (not Antarctica yet).
W.
Brian Harland - interested in determining paleolatitudes of these
Neoproterozoic deposits. See Geol. Rundschau 54: 45-61 (1964) and Scientific
American 211: 28-36 (1964). He found that many of these
Neoproterozoic glacial deposits formed at high latitudes. The thought
then was: normal remnant magnetism in rocks was believed to be primary if it
hadn’t been heated beyond the Curie Point. Now, though, we know
remagnetization can be done by low-temperature chemical magnetization.
Can
do a fold test to see this. Can also do a reversal test. Do both
for determination of 1˚ vs. 2˚ magnetization for the rocks you’re
interested in.
Flinders
Ranges, Australia - the Elatina Formation (glacial interval) in the
Neoproterozoic has been determined to be within 10˚ of the
paleoequator. The Elatina laminations are tidal - the best tidal
rhythmites in the world - allows for accurate calculation of the Earth-Moon
distance, to within 100 km. The Elatina rocks are marine, since the
laminations are tidal. Glaciers thus descended to sea level at very low
latitudes. The magnetization of the Elatina Formation was found to be
1˚ - with sedimentation.
David
Evans (2000) - American Journal of Science 300: 347-433. He has a
histogram of occurrences of different glacial units formed at or close to sea
level at different latitudes. Lots occur <10˚ from the
equator. There are some from 40˚-60˚ from the equator.
There are none >60˚ from the equator. This is similar to the
histogram of latitudinal trends of evaporation/precipitation - lots near the
equator, less at mid-latitudes. The expectation of glacial deposits near
the poles is not seen here.
Kirschvink
(a biogeologist and paleomag. guy at Caltech) tested the Elatina Formation and
agreed that ice did go to the equator in the Neoproterozoic. Though a
fanciful idea, this is a well-known concept to climate modelers and climate
physicists.
Heat
absorbed = Heat emitted
πR2Es[1-a] = 4πR2[fsTs4]
where
R = radius of the Earth
Es = solar irradiance
a = planetary albedo
f = effective infrared transmission factor (greenhouse effect)
s = Stefan-Boltzman constant
Ts = surface temperature
Runaway
ice albedo - ice reflects solar radiation and further cooling results (positive
feedback). Effect on a spherical Earth - the strength of the feedback
increases as ice reaches further from the pole.
Instability
in the climate system does occur in this ice-albedo feedback - there is a point
where the runaway ice albedo positive feedback becomes unstoppable - ice would
freeze over even the equator, resulting in an ice-covered world. The
instability point is where ice reaches ~30˚ from the equator.
See
Caldeira & Kasting (1992) - Nature 359: 226.
Ikeda
& Tajika (1999) - Geophys. Res. Letters 267: 349.
Snowball
Freeze Scenario
1)
large polar sea - ice caps - most continents are on the equator in the
Neoproterozoic. A little over 0˚ C glacial mean temperature - bright
whitish “land” where there would otherwise be water. Sea level drops -
more true land is exposed, and more albedo. Equatorial continental
distribution makes for a colder Earth.
2)
runaway ice-albedo feedback - ice on upland areas - tropical ocean totally
frozen or not? Some open water in the tropics? Planetary albedo
goes up to 0.5 or 0.6. Have 1-1.5 km thick ice sheets overall.
Climate
physicists never believed that the Earth did ever experience this. This
was considered to be a terminal condition. To escape from this, solar
flux has to be raised 25%. Obviously, we did escape.
Iron
formations are associated with the Neoproterozoic glacial events. This is
strange, since BIFs were largely gone by then. All Neoproterozoic
ironstones are within glacial intervals.
The
escape of the Snowball Earth condition was plate tectonics. See geologic
carbon cycle by Walker et al. (1981). In a Snowball Earth, plate
tectonics continues - get a slow increase in CO2 in the atmosphere
(from volcanoes), without the usual CO2 sinks (no photosynthesis on
a Snowball Earth and no silicate weathering on the land). So, there is a
continual source of CO2 (volcanism) and no sinks, resulting in
rising CO2 levels after the onset of Snowball Earth. Need to
reach high CO2 levels in the air to overcome a 0.6 planetary
albedo. The amount you need is 120,000 ppm CO2 (12% CO2)
in the air. These levels would be reached in ~4 m.y. (rough estimate).
There
is an escape to the Snowball Earth - CO2 rises slowly, to where the
melting point is reached in the tropics, which becomes an area that resists
perennial ice growth. Once melting starts, reverse albedo kick in - dark
water + high CO2 results in faster and faster melting. Under
these conditions, global sea ice 300-400 meters thick would disappear in
100-1000 years. Ice disappears far faster than CO2 is consumed.
This results in a transient ultragreenhouse effect. The Earth reaches the
ice-free branch and surface temperatures skyrocket. Estimated surface sea
temperatures at the tropics were 40-50˚ C (120-130˚ F).
Intense
evaporation of sea water - a strong hydrologic cycle kicks in - rain is pouring
down on the landscape after being glacially altered. The landscape
becomes an intense chemical reaction factory - silicate weathering levels are
high, and there is a big flush of alkalinity into the oceans. So, there
is an abrupt beginning to Snowball Earth and a gradual amelioration, but
reaching a point were the tropical oceans begin to open, resulting in a sudden
transient ultragreenhouse effect. Then CO2 is consumed by
silicate weathering on the newly-exposed land, and CO2 gradually
return to steady state levels.
Kirschvink
presented this in 1989, and published it as a chapter in the Proterozoic
Biosphere book in 1991. Kirschvink suggested some tests of this
hypothesis to see if the Snowball Earth hypothesis was right:
1)
Neoproterozoic glaciations should by synchronous. It has been
tough getting geochronologic dating on these deposits. Even naysayers
agree that these glacial deposits are correlatable, though, based on
coincidence with isotope curves. These deposits are global events.
Carbon isotopes, though ambiguous, are robust recorders of events - it is hard
to change isotopes, and anomalies at this time are very large. Secular
variations in carbon isotopes (in carbonates and in organic matter) are due to
burial flux. Volcanic carbon input = -5 to -6 d13C
VPDB (‰). When carbon is fixed by organism, the organic matter is
depleted ~3% in carbon-13, compared with dissolved carbon in water. The
more you bury organic matter, then carbonate d13C
(= dissolved carbon in water) gets higher. Get heavier residual seawater
occurring when organic matter burial rates increase. Actually, not when
organic matter burial rates increase, but when you get an increase in the ratio
of Corg/Ctotal burial flux. dcarb
varies ~3 per mil in the Phanerozoic. The Proterozoic values vary 5-10
per mil. The Cretaceous-Tertiary event saw only a 2 per mil change.
These unusual events correlate. All agree that these isotope changes
(dramatic changes at that) are correlatable - at the worst, they are not
strongly diachronous. Reliable records, though, depend on sound
understanding of the stratigraphy. Hoffman & company spent many years
doing Neoproterozoic stratigraphy in the Otavi Group of Namibia.
2)
Expect to see a sudden lithologic change associated with the onset and end of
Snowball Earth. Kirschvink didn’t originally know about cap
carbonates. Having glacial deposits sharply but conformably overlain by
warm-water carbonates - this is a predictable consequence of the Snowball Earth
Hypothesis, not a paradox. Get a tremendous alkalinity flux into the
oceans after glaciation - this drives precipitation of CaCO3 - cap
carbonates have to be there, according to the model. Only silicate
weathering brings CO2 down to steady state levels. Cap
carbonates have dolomite at the base and limestone above that. The
limestone was originally crystals of aragonite growing on the seafloor.
We know this based on primary fabric details that are preserved. This
indicates high rates of CaCO3 precipitation due to supersaturation
of carbonate in the water. Anything that sticks up off the seafloor is in
higher alkalinity, and will have aragonite growth. Rapid deposition of
cap carbonates is thy key to understanding the carbon isotope curve
changes. A -5 to -6 per mil value in carbon isotopes is close to mantle
values (= volcanically derived CO2). What does this
mean? A dead ocean & little to no organic
production/photosynthesis? It seems so. So, oceans get carbon
isotope values of -5 to -6 per mil. However, the lowest values are not at
the base of the cap carbonates. Was organic productivity fine
(“normal”)? There may have been lots of productivity but organic matter
burial rates are low because carbonate precipitation rates are so high.
Low carbon isotope values in cap carbonates are due to the overwhelming of
organic matter burial by carbonate production. Atmospheric source gets
carbon-12 rich because HCO3- conversion from CO2
includes an 8 per mil shift in preference for carbon-13. Maielberg cap
carbonates - the base of the succession has a carbon isotope value of -2 d13C.
3)
Expect little air-sea gas exchange in a Snowball Earth. Since
there are lots of O2 sinks in the ocean (Fe in vent areas, for
example), oceans will get anoxic. In the absence of molecular O2,
Fe2+ gets widely distributed in the ocean water - this should
explain the presence of iron formations. Lots of Fe in solution in anoxic
water. Ferric oxide formation requires an absence of sulfide (derived
from sulfate as a weathering product from the land, reduced by bacteria to
sulfide - this can’t be happening in order to get ferric oxide formation &
ironstone formation). So, can get lots of ferric oxide
formation. The last BIFs are at 1.8 by. But, after a 1.2 by-long
hiatus, get new BIFs associated with Neoproterozoic glacial deposits. Not
all Neoproterozoic glacial deposits have associated iron formations,
though. Within the cap carbonates of the Mackenzie Mountains and in
Australia, the upper dolomite part and the lower limestone part of the cap
carbonate have a 40-50 cm thick layer of 1˚ barite at the
dolomite-limestone boundary. It looks like stromatolites. It is
primary! Barite is an incredibly insoluble mineral. Need to boil
barite in HF for a week to dissolve it. It always occurs between the
dolomite and the limestone. Why is it there? Can’t transport lots
of Ba into modern oceans, due to the presence of sulfate. If there
is little or no sulfate in the oceans, can get an oxic/anoxic chemocline.
If that chemocline stabilizes, below the chemocline will be Ba-rich
waters. Sulfate ions are poisoners for dolomite formation. Below
the chemocline, barite waters lacked sulfate and above the chemocline, the
water had sulfate. Dolomite will have faithful carbon isotope
values. People assume all dolomite is secondary, but here it is primary -
get fractionation that is not usually accounted for by isotope stratigraphers.
Neoproterozoic
enigmas - worldwide distribution of glacial deposits, low-latitude ice lines at
sea level, Fe-formations with ice-rafted debris, post-glacial cap carbonates, and
multicellular animal evolution within 20 my of the end of the Snowball Earth.
Why
didn’t these Snowball Earth events occur all the time? Need an equatorial
distribution of continents - this hasn’t happened yet in the Phanerozoic.
Equatorially-distributed continents inevitably results in a colder Earth.
Normally, land in the tropics has higher weathering rates, resulting in CO2
levels dropping and temperatures dropping, which is a check on weathering
rates. In addition to albedo effects, equatorially distributed continents
results in extensive polar ice caps. Then, the atmosphere will be drier
(less latent heat in it), and atmospheric energy is reduced, and circulation is
less effective in transporting heat from low latitudes to high latitudes.
The tropics will be warmer but the poles will be colder, and will be more
susceptible to albedo runaway.
What
triggers individual glaciation events? Can see a 10 per mil drop in
carbon isotopes before the onset of glacial deposits. This indicates a
changing input of carbon, likely from generation of methane (from seafloor
clathrates) - methane has a significant greenhouse forcing effect. The
carbon cycle responds to this - CO2 levels go down (because it’s
warmer and weathering rates go up, which is a CO2 sink). If
you get an interruption in methane supply, the methane already in the air
oxidizes to CO2 (a weaker greenhouse gas). All of this is from
an unusual Neoproterozoic paleogeography which allows a Snowball Earth to
happen.
Darwin: bad hypotheses
can’t explain lots of facts.
Weaknesses
of the Snowball Earth hypothesis - the results/conditions are so far outside
what we know, so we have to figure out things based on first principles only.
Lesson: Juicy stuff
remains to be found, even after 200 years of geologic investigations.