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      Prolonged Late Permian–Early Triassic hyperthermal: failure of climate regulation?

      Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences
      The Royal Society

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          Abstract

          <p class="first" id="d352184e131">The extreme warmth associated with the mass extinction at the Permian–Triassic boundary was likely produced by a rapid build-up of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere from the eruption and emplacement of the Siberian Traps. In comparison to another hyperthermal event, the Palaeocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum, the Permian–Triassic event, while leaving a similar carbon isotope record, likely had larger amounts of CO <sub>2</sub> emitted and did not follow the expected time scale of climate recovery. The quantities and rates of CO <sub>2</sub> emission likely exhausted the capacity of the long-term climate regulator associated with silicate weathering. Failure was enhanced by slow rock uplift and high continentality associated with the supercontinental phase of global tectonics at the time of the Siberian Traps eruption. </p><p id="d352184e139">This article is part of a discussion meeting issue ‘Hyperthermals: rapid and extreme global warming in our geological past’. </p>

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          A negative feedback mechanism for the long-term stabilization of Earth's surface temperature

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            The carbonate-silicate geochemical cycle and its effect on atmospheric carbon dioxide over the past 100 million years

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              Release of methane from a volcanic basin as a mechanism for initial Eocene global warming

              A 200,000-yr interval of extreme global warming marked the start of the Eocene epoch about 55 million years ago. Negative carbon- and oxygen-isotope excursions in marine and terrestrial sediments show that this event was linked to a massive and rapid (approximately 10,000 yr) input of isotopically depleted carbon. It has been suggested previously that extensive melting of gas hydrates buried in marine sediments may represent the carbon source and has caused the global climate change. Large-scale hydrate melting, however, requires a hitherto unknown triggering mechanism. Here we present evidence for the presence of thousands of hydrothermal vent complexes identified on seismic reflection profiles from the Vøring and Møre basins in the Norwegian Sea. We propose that intrusion of voluminous mantle-derived melts in carbon-rich sedimentary strata in the northeast Atlantic may have caused an explosive release of methane--transported to the ocean or atmosphere through the vent complexes--close to the Palaeocene/Eocene boundary. Similar volcanic and metamorphic processes may explain climate events associated with other large igneous provinces such as the Siberian Traps (approximately 250 million years ago) and the Karoo Igneous Province (approximately 183 million years ago).
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences
                Phil. Trans. R. Soc. A
                The Royal Society
                1364-503X
                1471-2962
                September 03 2018
                October 13 2018
                September 03 2018
                October 13 2018
                : 376
                : 2130
                : 20170078
                Article
                10.1098/rsta.2017.0078
                6127386
                30177562
                6f69258e-3ff5-45c1-a6fe-1e0dd73795fb
                © 2018

                http://royalsocietypublishing.org/licence

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