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Did Supercontinents Create Oxygen-Rich Earth?

Michael Reilly, Discovery News
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It's Elemental
It's Elemental...
 

July 30, 2008 -- Ancient supercontinents with mountain ranges as high as the Himalayas may have played a critical role in producing the oxygen we breathe today, researchers report in a new study.

Early Earth was inhospitable to life as we know it, with almost no oxygen to speak of. That is, until 2.4 billion years ago, when concentrations of the gas suddenly started climbing.

Geologists call it the Great Oxygenation Event and believe newly evolved bacteria floating in the oceans were the cause: As the bacteria consumed carbon dioxide and sunlight to make food through photosynthesis, they emitted oxygen as a byproduct.

But Ian Campbell and Charlotte Allen of the Australian National University in Canberra point out that the planet's first great landmass, a giant ancestor of Pangea, formed at the same time.

What's more, each of the six other supercontinents in geologic history -- including Pangea, which existed 300 million years ago -- seem to coincide with steady upticks in atmospheric oxygen.

Coincidence? They think not. In a study published this week in the journal Nature Geoscience, the authors argue that each time a supercontinent assembled, it created huge mountain ranges. As the mountains eroded, the world's rivers washed them into the sea.

Among the detritus were vast quantities of phosphorous, iron and calcium -- nutrients the ocean-going bacteria could use to grow in tremendous numbers. As they did, they consumed carbon dioxide and flooded the atmosphere with oxygen.


 
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