Thursday, December 06, 2007

Earth was a slushball

SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend
An extraordinary episode of global cooling hundreds of millions of years ago that some experts say caused Earth to completely freeze over has been miscalculated, a new study says. Instead of "Snowball Earth," the planet really became "Slushball Earth," its authors suggest. The great chill - the longest and deepest ice age in Earth's known history happened during the late Neoproterozoic era, 850 to 542 million years ago. The evidence for the Snowball thesis comes from deep sediments in the ocean. Scientists look through these layers to measure levels of the isotope carbon 13 (C13), deposited in plants through photosynthesis, as a telltale of Earth's climate.

Above and below the Cryogenian layer is an abundance of C13. But the Cryogenian layer has negligible levels of this isotope. The explanation is that Earth froze over completely and glaciers crept down into the tropics, possibly even reaching the equator. The brilliant white shell reflected back the Sun's rays, and thus its heat, so well that the Snowball persisted for nearly 200 million years. Eventually the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide (CO2), welling up from volcanoes, escaped into the air and thankfully set the planet onto a warming trend, and so the icy blanket was melted.

Image and Article source: Deccan Chronicle

Labels: , , , , ,



AddThis Social Bookmark Button   AddThis Feed Button

Thursday, October 18, 2007

Can Earth survive Sun's explosion?

SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend
In just two months, two planets, as old as the Universe itself have been discovered, suggesting life could have begun long before the earth was formed.
Peg V392b is the latest and oldest planet known to man.
Thirteen billion years old, it circles a dying star at the same distance we circle our Sun.
By surviving its stars' explosive death throes, the planet suggests Earth too might survive when the sun explodes five billion years from now.
Interestingly, just two months ago, another planet enjoyed the "Oldest in the Universe" tag. 12.7 billion years old and 7,200 light-years away, this one once orbited a star as pleasant as our Sun is now.
Its discovery had astronomers wondering if life didn't begin long before the Earth was formed.

image and article source:http://www.ibnlive.com/

Labels: , , ,



AddThis Social Bookmark Button   AddThis Feed Button