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Politics : The Environmentalist Thread -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Wharf Rat who wrote (10620)3/20/2007 12:37:49 AM
From: Wharf Rat  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 36917
 
And the world looked really different in those days...
[edit] Paleogeography
A global drop in sea level at the end of the Devonian reversed early in the Carboniferous; this created the widespread epicontinental seas and carbonate depostion of the Mississippian.[1] There was also a drop in south polar temperatures; southern Gondwanaland was glaciated throughout the period, though it is uncertain if the ice sheets were a holdover from the Devonian or not.[2] These conditions apparently had little effect in the deep tropics, where lush coal swamps flourished within 30 degrees of the northernmost glaciers.[3]


Generalized geographic map of the United States in Middle Pennsylvanian time.A mid-Carboniferous drop in sea-level precipitated a major marine extinction, one that hit crinoids and ammonites especially hard.[4] This sea-level drop and the associated unconformity in North America separate the Mississippian period from the Pennsylvanian period.[5]

The Carboniferous was a time of active mountain-building, as the supercontinent Pangea came together. The southern continents remained tied together in the supercontinent Gondwana, which collided with North America-Europe (Laurussia) along the present line of eastern North America. This continental collision resulted in the Hercynian orogeny in Europe, and the Alleghenian orogeny in North America; it also extended the newly-uplifted Appalachians southwestward as the Ouachita Mountains.[6] In the same time frame, much of present eastern Eurasian plate welded itself to Europe along the line of the Ural mountains. Most of the Mesozoic supercontinent of Pangea was now assembled, although North China (which would collide in the Latest Carboniferous), and South China continents were still separated from Laurasia. The Late Carboniferous Pangaea was shaped like an "O".

There were two major oceans in the Carboniferous - Panthalassa and Paleo-Tethys, which was inside the "O" in the Carboniferous Pangaea. Other minor oceans were shrinking and eventually closed - Rheic Ocean (closed by the assembly of South and North America), the small, shallow Ural Ocean (which was closed by the collision of Baltica and Siberia continents, creating the Ural Mountains) and Proto-Tethys Ocean (closed by North China collision with Siberia/Kazakhstania.
en.wikipedia.org

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worldwideschool.org



To: Wharf Rat who wrote (10620)3/20/2007 12:46:04 AM
From: D. Long  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 36917
 
And yet if you look at that graph, isn't it strange that CO2 spikes have little correllation with rising or falling global temperature? Look at that Cambrian spike, and nary a puff of warmer air to be found.

And as the link notes, CO2 during the Ordovician was 12 times higher than today, and it was during an ice age. Not much of a correllation.