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Earth Science

A Plunge In Incoming Sunlight May Have Triggered 'Snowball Earths' (phys.org) 53

Jennifer Chu writes via Phys.Org: At least twice in Earth's history, nearly the entire planet was encased in a sheet of snow and ice. These dramatic "Snowball Earth" events occurred in quick succession, somewhere around 700 million years ago, and evidence suggests that the consecutive global ice ages set the stage for the subsequent explosion of complex, multicellular life on Earth. Scientists have considered multiple scenarios for what may have tipped the planet into each ice age. While no single driving process has been identified, it's assumed that whatever triggered the temporary freeze-overs must have done so in a way that pushed the planet past a critical threshold, such as reducing incoming sunlight or atmospheric carbon dioxide to levels low enough to set off a global expansion of ice.

But MIT scientists now say that Snowball Earths were likely the product of "rate-induced glaciations." That is, they found the Earth can be tipped into a global ice age when the level of solar radiation it receives changes quickly over a geologically short period of time. The amount of solar radiation doesn't have to drop to a particular threshold point; as long as the decrease in incoming sunlight occurs faster than a critical rate, a temporary glaciation, or Snowball Earth, will follow. These findings, published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society A, suggest that whatever triggered the Earth's ice ages most likely involved processes that quickly reduced the amount of solar radiation coming to the surface, such as widespread volcanic eruptions or biologically induced cloud formation that could have significantly blocked out the sun's rays.

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A Plunge In Incoming Sunlight May Have Triggered 'Snowball Earths'

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  • The operative word here is "may"
    • There's no "may" about it.

      The ONLY thing that can possible cause a change in The Earth's temperature is the amount of sunlight reaching it.

      (...and the only thing that can affect that is the Earth's atmosphere, hence global warming due to increased CO2)

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by thomst ( 1640045 )

        Joce640k misspoke:

        There's no "may" about it.

        The ONLY thing that can possible cause a change in The Earth's temperature is the amount of sunlight reaching it.

        (...and the only thing that can affect that is the Earth's atmosphere, hence global warming due to increased CO2)

        Er ... no. Not at all.

        In the case of sudden, global glaciation events, every instance for which a direct cause has been established thus far has turned out to be the result of a major bolide impact. You may, for instance, be familiar with the K-T event, in which a nickle-iron asteroid struck what is now the Gulf of Mexico, just offshore from the Yucatan Peninsula, creating first a worldwide firestorm, followed immediately by an ice age (caused by suspended smoke and dust), which caused mos

        • by syn3rg ( 530741 )

          Joce640k misspoke:

          The ONLY thing that can possible cause a change in The Earth's temperature is the amount of sunlight reaching it.

          (...and the only thing that can affect that is the Earth's atmosphere

          In the case of sudden, global glaciation events, every instance for which a direct cause has been established thus far has turned out to be the result of a major bolide impact. You may, for instance, be familiar with the K-T event, in which a nickle-iron asteroid struck what is now the Gulf of Mexico, just offshore from the Yucatan Peninsula, creating first a worldwide firestorm, followed immediately by an ice age (caused by suspended smoke and dust),

          I think you're both right to a degree (pun intended). "Smoke and dust" suspended in the atmosphere, thereby limiting the amount of sunlight that reaches the Earth, but I think he did misspeak on the CO2 aspect, that doesn't affect sunlight at all.

          • I think you're both right to a degree (pun intended). "Smoke and dust" suspended in the atmosphere, thereby limiting the amount of sunlight that reaches the Earth, but I think he did misspeak on the CO2 aspect, that doesn't affect sunlight at all.

            The heat of the greenhouse effect comes from sunlight.

            • I think you're both right to a degree (pun intended). "Smoke and dust" suspended in the atmosphere, thereby limiting the amount of sunlight that reaches the Earth, but I think he did misspeak on the CO2 aspect, that doesn't affect sunlight at all.

              The heat of the greenhouse effect comes from sunlight.

              And the severity of that 'greenhouse effect' depends on reflection, heat retention and atmospheric composition. Fluctuations in the earth's orbit also cause temperature fluctuations. Nothing is ever true/false binary choice simple in climate science.

        • Er ... no. Not at all.

          In the case of sudden, global glaciation events, every instance for which a direct cause has been established thus far has turned out to be the result of a major bolide impact. You may, for instance, be familiar with the K-T event, in which a nickle-iron asteroid struck what is now the Gulf of Mexico, just offshore from the Yucatan Peninsula, creating first a worldwide firestorm, followed immediately by an ice age (caused by suspended smoke and dust),

          "caused by suspended smoke and dust", ie. less sunlight.

      • The ONLY thing that can possible cause a change in The Earth's temperature is the amount of sunlight reaching it.

        You mean besides the amount of near-infrared radiation leaving it?

        (...and the only thing that can affect that is the Earth's atmosphere, hence global warming due to increased CO2)

        Yeah, increased CO2 is about the greenhouse effect, which has to do with how much energy is retained, not how much energy arrives. HTH, HAND

      • For this, climate change isn’t the threat, the supervolcano under Yellowstone is. Frankly if that goes up, every model of the atmosphere and climate change goes out the window. It’s something we need to put as much effort into solving as climate change.
  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday July 30, 2020 @06:11AM (#60346639)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • It is weird, but in much of Europe, firewood is the cheapest form of energy. It would actually be cost effective to build a wood fired steam engine to generate electricity for my home, but solar and wind is less of a nuisance.
      • t would actually be cost effective to build a wood fired steam engine to generate electricity for my home

        Only if your time and effort are worth next to nothing.

    • BTW, you forgot one C in your sig. It was SSSR or CCCP in Cyrillic.
    • The flamewar this article is going to cause should keep us warm for weeks.
      • This one of the only places on the internet where autists argue with each other over what color the sky is. Lots of supposedly smart people who think they know more than most.

      • only if we print it all out on paper and feed it to our wood burning stoves.

  • the earth suddenly got cold because there was suddenly less sunlight. hope these" scientists" are making more than my grocery bagger.

  • I'm wondering if a galactic dust cloud could be dense enough to block that amount of light, and whether enough dust would have fallen into the atmosphere to be detectable in rocks of the time. There aren't any near us now, but the Sun moves around a lot in 700 million years and there are a few clouds in our general neighborhood.

  • So now should we be freaking out about Global Dimming [wikipedia.org]?
  • For an extreme example, if Jupiter were to drop onto the Sun, it would take about 16-17 years of darkness to go back to original sunlight levels. (At least according to the calculations here: https://www.quora.com/What-wou... [quora.com] ).

    So, even if the object is not as massive as Jupiter, a sufficiently large one could cool the Sun down rapidly.

    Just another way the Universe can introduce "Everybody Dies" scenario.

Ocean: A body of water occupying about two-thirds of a world made for man -- who has no gills. -- Ambrose Bierce

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