Atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) data for the last 420 million years (My) show long-term fluctuations related to supercontinent cycles as well as shorter cycles at 26 to 32 My whose origin is unknown. Periodicities of 26 to 30 My occur in diverse geological phenomena including mass extinctions, flood basalt volcanism, ocean anoxic events, deposition of massive evaporites, sequence boundaries, and orogenic events and have previously been linked to an extraterrestrial mechanism. The vast oceanic crustal carbon reservoir is an alternative potential driving force of climate fluctuations at these time scales, with hydrothermal crustal carbon uptake occurring mostly in young crust with a strong dependence on ocean bottom water temperature. We com...
Climate trends on timescales of 10s to 100s of millions of years are controlled by changes in solar ...
The CO2 liberated along subduction zones through intrusive/extrusive magmatic activity and the resul...
Over long periods of time (~Ma), we may consider the oceans, atmosphere and biosphere as a single e...
Carbon is a key control on the surface chemistry and climate of Earth. Significant volumes of carbon...
Plate tectonics, as the unifying theory in Earth sciences, controls the functioning of important pla...
Carbon is a key control on the surface chemistry and climate of Earth. Significant volumes of carbon...
Carbon is a key control on the surface chemistry and climate of Earth. Significant volumes of carbon...
Aims. The long-term carbon cycle for planets with a surface entirely covered by oceans works differe...
The CO_2 liberated along subduction zones through intrusive/extrusive magmatic activity and the resu...
Aims. The long-term carbon cycle for planets with a surface entirely covered by oceans works differe...
Changes to the carbon content of the deep ocean, the largest reservoir in the surficial carbon cycle...
The subduction of upper oceanic lithosphere acts as a primary driver of Earth’s deep carbon and wate...
Late Pleistocene atmospheric CO2 concentrations varied by ~90 ppm, rising with Antarctic and global ...
Tectonic drivers of degassing and weathering processes are key long-term controls on atmospheric CO2...
Late Pleistocene atmospheric CO2 concentrations varied by ~90 ppm, rising with Antarctic and global ...
Climate trends on timescales of 10s to 100s of millions of years are controlled by changes in solar ...
The CO2 liberated along subduction zones through intrusive/extrusive magmatic activity and the resul...
Over long periods of time (~Ma), we may consider the oceans, atmosphere and biosphere as a single e...
Carbon is a key control on the surface chemistry and climate of Earth. Significant volumes of carbon...
Plate tectonics, as the unifying theory in Earth sciences, controls the functioning of important pla...
Carbon is a key control on the surface chemistry and climate of Earth. Significant volumes of carbon...
Carbon is a key control on the surface chemistry and climate of Earth. Significant volumes of carbon...
Aims. The long-term carbon cycle for planets with a surface entirely covered by oceans works differe...
The CO_2 liberated along subduction zones through intrusive/extrusive magmatic activity and the resu...
Aims. The long-term carbon cycle for planets with a surface entirely covered by oceans works differe...
Changes to the carbon content of the deep ocean, the largest reservoir in the surficial carbon cycle...
The subduction of upper oceanic lithosphere acts as a primary driver of Earth’s deep carbon and wate...
Late Pleistocene atmospheric CO2 concentrations varied by ~90 ppm, rising with Antarctic and global ...
Tectonic drivers of degassing and weathering processes are key long-term controls on atmospheric CO2...
Late Pleistocene atmospheric CO2 concentrations varied by ~90 ppm, rising with Antarctic and global ...
Climate trends on timescales of 10s to 100s of millions of years are controlled by changes in solar ...
The CO2 liberated along subduction zones through intrusive/extrusive magmatic activity and the resul...
Over long periods of time (~Ma), we may consider the oceans, atmosphere and biosphere as a single e...