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Late Ordovician climate change and extinctions driven by elevated volcanic nutrient supply

Late Ordovician climate change and extinctions driven by elevated volcanic nutrient supply
Late Ordovician climate change and extinctions driven by elevated volcanic nutrient supply
The Late Ordovician (~459–444 million years ago) was characterized by global cooling, glaciation and severe mass extinction. These events may have been driven by increased delivery of the nutrient phosphorus (P) to the ocean and associated increases in marine productivity, but it is not clear why this occurred in the two pulses identified in the geological record. We link both cooling phases—and the extinction—to volcanic eruptions through marine deposition of nutrient-rich ash and the weathering of terrestrially emplaced ash and lava. We then reconstruct the influence of Late Ordovician volcanic P delivery on the marine system by coupling an estimate of bioavailable phosphate supply (derived from a depletion and weathering model) to a global biogeochemical model. Our model compares volcanic ash P content in marine sediments before and after alteration to determine depletion factors, and we find good agreement with observed carbon isotope and reconstructed temperature shifts. Hence, massive volcanism can drive substantial global cooling on million-year timescales due to P delivery associated with long-term weathering of volcanic deposits, offsetting the transient warming of greenhouse gas emission associated with volcanic eruptions. Such longer-term cooling and potential for marine eutrophication may be important for other volcanism-driven global events.
1752-0894
924
Longman, Jack
26a3c4e3-79d6-4102-9708-a5b02b97121d
Mills, Benjamin
f1bb72ca-97ed-4483-8ca3-80fb59e6c125
Manners, Hayley
35ac3cd6-f3b7-4226-ab7d-d1530402ba33
Gernon, Thomas
658041a0-fdd1-4516-85f4-98895a39235e
Palmer, Martin
d2e60e81-5d6e-4ddb-a243-602537286080
Longman, Jack
26a3c4e3-79d6-4102-9708-a5b02b97121d
Mills, Benjamin
f1bb72ca-97ed-4483-8ca3-80fb59e6c125
Manners, Hayley
35ac3cd6-f3b7-4226-ab7d-d1530402ba33
Gernon, Thomas
658041a0-fdd1-4516-85f4-98895a39235e
Palmer, Martin
d2e60e81-5d6e-4ddb-a243-602537286080

Longman, Jack, Mills, Benjamin, Manners, Hayley, Gernon, Thomas and Palmer, Martin (2021) Late Ordovician climate change and extinctions driven by elevated volcanic nutrient supply. Nature Geoscience, 14, 924, [NGS-2021-01-00061C]. (doi:10.1038/s41561-021-00855-5).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The Late Ordovician (~459–444 million years ago) was characterized by global cooling, glaciation and severe mass extinction. These events may have been driven by increased delivery of the nutrient phosphorus (P) to the ocean and associated increases in marine productivity, but it is not clear why this occurred in the two pulses identified in the geological record. We link both cooling phases—and the extinction—to volcanic eruptions through marine deposition of nutrient-rich ash and the weathering of terrestrially emplaced ash and lava. We then reconstruct the influence of Late Ordovician volcanic P delivery on the marine system by coupling an estimate of bioavailable phosphate supply (derived from a depletion and weathering model) to a global biogeochemical model. Our model compares volcanic ash P content in marine sediments before and after alteration to determine depletion factors, and we find good agreement with observed carbon isotope and reconstructed temperature shifts. Hence, massive volcanism can drive substantial global cooling on million-year timescales due to P delivery associated with long-term weathering of volcanic deposits, offsetting the transient warming of greenhouse gas emission associated with volcanic eruptions. Such longer-term cooling and potential for marine eutrophication may be important for other volcanism-driven global events.

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Accepted/In Press date: 15 October 2021
Published date: 2 December 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 452002
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/452002
ISSN: 1752-0894
PURE UUID: f0b7a6a1-6e62-49b9-804c-688b6f74126f
ORCID for Thomas Gernon: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7717-2092
ORCID for Martin Palmer: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3020-0914

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 08 Nov 2021 17:32
Last modified: 05 Jul 2025 01:44

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Contributors

Author: Jack Longman
Author: Benjamin Mills
Author: Hayley Manners
Author: Thomas Gernon ORCID iD
Author: Martin Palmer ORCID iD

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