Scientists Cast Doubt on Theory of What Triggered Antarctic Glaciation
http://www.utexas.edu/news/2013/07/11/scientists-cast-doubt-on-theory-of-what-triggered-antarctic-glaciation/[font face=Serif][font size=5]Scientists Cast Doubt on Theory of What Triggered Antarctic Glaciation[/font]
July 11, 2013
AUSTIN, Texas
[font size=3]A team of U.S. and U.K. scientists has found geologic evidence that casts doubt on one of the conventional explanations for how Antarcticas ice sheet began forming. Ian Dalziel, research professor at The University of Texas at Austins
Institute for Geophysics and professor in the
Jackson School of Geosciences, and his colleagues
report the findings today in an online edition of the journal
Geology.
The Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC), an ocean current flowing clockwise around the entire continent, insulates Antarctica from warmer ocean water to the north, helping maintain the ice sheet. For several decades, scientists have surmised that the onset of a complete ACC played a critical role in the initial glaciation of the continent about 34 million years ago.
Now, rock samples from the central Scotia Sea near Antarctica reveal the remnants of a now-submerged volcanic arc that formed sometime before 28 million years ago and might have blocked the formation of the ACC until less than 12 million years ago. Hence, the onset of the ACC may not be related to the initial glaciation of Antarctica, but rather to the subsequent well-documented descent of the planet into a much colder icehouse glacial state.
If you had sailed into the Scotia Sea 25 million years ago, you would have seen a scattering of volcanoes rising above the water, says Dalziel. They would have looked similar to the modern volcanic arc to the east, the South Sandwich Islands.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G34352.1