posted on 2015-04-30, 15:48authored byAndrew D. Saunders
The links between the Siberian Traps and the end-
Permian mass extinction,
and between the North Atlantic Igneous Province (NA
IP) and the Palaeocene-Eocene
Thermal Maximum (PETM), demonstrate a critical role
for large-igneous provinces
(LIPs) in the disruption of the Earth-system carbon
cycle (ESCC). High-precision age
dates for both volcanic provinces and the associate
d environmental crises show that in
both cases, the crisis was contemporaneous with the
volcanism. The NAIP comprises
two phases: the earlier Phase 1 (~61 Ma), and the m
uch more voluminous Phase 2, ~56
Ma, linked to the opening of the NE Atlantic. The l
atter triggered the PETM, the largest
Cenozoic hyperthermal. The Siberian Traps are sign
ificantly more voluminous than the
NAIP, and triggered the end-Permian mass extinction
. The masses of volcanic CO
2
emitted from these provinces may have been much gre
ater than previously suggested,
because substantial gas may come from intrusive bod
ies deep within the crust (cryptic
degassing: Armstrong McKay et al., 2014). Precurso
ry warming due to the
accumulation of volcanic CO
2
in the atmosphere likely triggered the release of
low-
δ
13
C
methane hydrate, although the masses of methane hyd
rate alone may have been
insufficient to account for the observed temperatur
e rises; the organic C was likely
strongly supplemented by magmatically-derived carbo
n and thermogenic carbon
released during emplacement of sills and dykes into
C-rich sedimentary units. More
data are required on the volcanic flux rates in ord
er to refine the cause-effect
relationships between LIPs and the ESCC.
History
Citation
Geological Magazine, Published online: 09 June 2015
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Geology