Posted on Wednesday 5 November 2003
The evolution of tiny, shelled sea creatures ended a 200 million
year era of extreme ice ages and has protected the Earth from any
repeat ever since, suggest the results of a new modelling study.
During the frozen period, known as "snowball Earth" the polar ice
caps extended far down into low latitudes, covering much of the planet.
The emergence of the plankton, which incorporate carbon dioxide into
calcium carbonate shells, created a new stability in the planet's
carbon cycle, argue Andy Ridgwell, at the University of Riverside,
California, and his colleagues. The minute organisms did this by
providing for the first time a way to dump calcium carbonate into the
deep waters below the open oceans.
Chemical processes in the sea that dissolve calcium carbonate
deposits alter the acidity of the water. This helps regulate the amount
of atmospheric carbon dioxide that can dissolve in seawater. And this
in turn helps the planet to regulate its temperature. [link]






