Check out how ancient extreme climate affect sand in deep sea

Check out how ancient extreme climate affect sand in deep sea
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Washington, US: The sedimentary cycle - erosion from mountains that generates sand that is taken out to the ocean - is of particular interest to geologists since it is fundamental to understanding how the planet operates.

It's also critical for comprehending the global sand budget and planning offshore operations such as oil production, wind farms, and carbon sequestration. Researchers have now examined the ancient Earth's sedimentary cycle during an abnormally hot period for signs regarding the effects of major climate events.

By synthesizing global data on deep-sea sand deposits, researchers identified a signal or "fingerprint" of extreme climate change from about 50 million years ago: turbidite deposits. These deposits, evidence of ancient rapid submarine water currents, are thought to be caused by the downslope transport of sediment that has accumulated at the top of the continental slope.

"This suggests that extreme weather events and exacerbated global climatic conditions contributing to increased erosion of landscapes could amplify delivery of sand into the deep ocean," said Stanford University adjunct lecturer Zack Burton, PhD '20, lead author on a study detailing the findings published Feb. 8 in Nature Scientific Reports.

The research challenges a long-held notion that sea-level changes are the dominant influence on sand deposits in the deep sea. When the sea level is low, there's a better chance for sediment eroded off mountains to find its way to the deep sea. Many researchers have theorized that high seas prevent sand from being deposited to deep seas because coastal plains and underwater continental shelves could be barriers to sand reaching deep waters.

But according to the study authors' compilation of 59 instances of early Eocene turbidite systems active 56 million to 48 million years ago, climatic conditions and tectonic activity may be more important than sea-level changes for deep-sea sand deposition.

"We suspected this was true, but we hadn't realized the magnitude of examples that have been documented in the literature," said senior study author Stephan Graham, the Welton Joseph and Maud L'Anphere Crook Professor in the Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability. "There were many more of those deep-water deposits than we had realized."

In the paper, the researchers present a conceptual model suggesting that conditions like intense precipitation and integrated river drainages can cause abundant sand-rich deep-marine deposits despite exceptionally high sea levels.

Earth during the early Eocene 56 million to 48 million years ago had the highest sea levels - with oceans over 200 feet above current levels - since before the sudden mass extinction of three-quarters of the planet's plant and animal species about 66 million years ago. There were rainforests in the Arctic, and alligators lived in the Dakotas.

While some of these conditions may be unfathomable, present-day climate change is giving us glimpses of the extreme climate events that besieged the early Eocene.

"As the Earth gets hotter and hotter because CO2 increases the greenhouse effect and sea level rise even further, then we would expect the increasing intensity of storms, higher precipitation rates - based on climate modelling by other people - to have much more impact in terms of sediment getting to the deep sea," Graham said.

While that may not be relevant anytime soon, the power of turbidity currents shouldn't be underestimated for future-proofing the next generations. The sediment-laden flows known as turbidity currents are like the devastating glowing avalanches that cascade down erupting volcanoes, Graham said.

Researchers first found out about turbidity currents because they were snapping transatlantic telegraph cables in 1929. "They're very powerful submarine flows of tremendous scale," Burton said.

With this synthesis of turbidity deposits from such a critical time in Earth's history, the researchers hope others will continue speculating about the aspects of warmer climates that may be impacting the global sedimentary cycle.

"Other factors, like human interactions with sedimentary systems and the terrestrial world we all live in, are combining to influence the movement of sediment," Burton said. "I think it's hard to consider from an everyday perspective, just because we don't see these systems - they're part of the beautiful mystery of the deep ocean which we know so little about."