Sunday, March 28, 2010

hydrogen sulphide ,not carbon dioxide led to permian extinction .and it may lead to our extinction too

Global Warming Led To Atmospheric Hydrogen Sulfide And Permian Extinction

ScienceDaily (Mar. 1, 2005) — Washington, D.C. -– Volcanic eruptions in Siberia 251 million years ago may have started a cascade of events leading to high hydrogen sulfide levels in the oceans and atmosphere and precipitating the largest mass extinction in Earth’s history, according to a Penn State geoscientist.

"The recent dating of the Siberian trap volcanoes to be contemporaneous with the end-Permian extinction suggests that they were the trigger for the environmental events that caused the extinctions," says Lee R. Kump, professor of geosciences. "But the warming caused by these volcanoes through carbon dioxide emissions would not be large enough to cause mass extinctions by itself."

That warming, however, could set off a series of events that led to mass extinction. During the end-Permian extinction 95 percent of all species on Earth became extinct, compared to only 75 percent during the K-T when a large asteroid apparently caused the dinosaurs to disappear.

Volcanic carbon dioxide would cause atmospheric warming that would, in turn, warm surface ocean water. Normally, the deep ocean gets its oxygen from the atmosphere at the poles. Cold water there soaks up oxygen from the air and because cold water is dense, it sinks and slowly moves equator-ward, taking oxygen with it. The warmer the water, the less oxygen can dissolve and the slower the water sinks and moves toward the equator.

“Warmer water slows the conveyer belt and brings less oxygen to the deep oceans,” says Kump.

The constant rain of organic debris produced by marine plants and animals, needs oxygen to decompose. With less oxygen, fewer organics are aerobically consumed.

"Today, there are not enough organics in the oceans to go anoxic," says Kump. "But in the Permian, if the warming from the volcanic carbon dioxide decreased oceanic oxygen, especially if atmospheric oxygen levels were lower, the oceans would be depleted of oxygen."

Once the oxygen is gone, the oceans become the realm of bacteria that obtain their oxygen from sulfur oxide compounds. These bacteria strip oxygen from the compounds and produce hydrogen sulfide. Hydrogen sulfide kills aerobic organisms.

Humans can smell hydrogen sulfide gas, the smell of rotten cabbage, in the parts per trillion range. In the deeps of the Black Sea today, hydrogen sulfide exists at about 200 parts per million. This is a toxic brew in which any aerobic, oxygen-needing organism would die. For the Black Sea, the hydrogen sulfide stays in the depths because our rich oxygen atmosphere mixes in the top layer of water and controls the diffusion of hydrogen sulfide upwards.

In the end-Permian, as the levels of atmospheric oxygen fell and the levels of hydrogen sulfide and carbon dioxide rose, the upper levels of the oceans could have become rich in hydrogen sulfide catastrophically. This would kill most the oceanic plants and animals. The hydrogen sulfide dispersing in the atmosphere would kill most terrestrial life.

"A hydrogen sulfide atmosphere fits the extinction better than one enriched in carbon dioxide," says Kump. "Carbon dioxide would have a profound effect on marine life, but terrestrial plants thrive on carbon dioxide, yet they are included in the extinction."

Another piece in the puzzle surrounding this extinction is that hydrogen sulfide gas destroys the ozone layer. Recently, Dr. Henk Visscher of Utrecht University and his colleagues suggested that there are fossil spores from the end-Permian that show deformities that researchers suspect were caused by ultra violet light.

"These deformities fit the idea that the ozone layer was damaged, letting in more ultra violet," says Kump.

Once this process is underway, methane produced in the ample swamps of this time period has little in the atmosphere to destroy it. The atmosphere becomes one of hydrogen sulfide, methane and ultra violet radiation.

The Penn State researcher and his colleagues are looking for biomarkers, indications of photosynthetic sulfur bacteria in deep-sea sediments to complement such biomarkers recently reported in shallow water sediments of this age by Kliti Grice, Curtin University of Technology, Australia, and colleagues in the Feb. 4 issue of the journal, Science. These bacteria live in places where no oxygen exists, but there is some sunlight. They would have been in their heyday in the end-Permian. Finding evidence of green sulfur bacteria would provide evidence for hydrogen sulfide as the cause of the mass extinctions.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

A wayfarer says to god
in the deep shadows of the rainy July,
with secret steps,thou walkest,
silent as night ,eluding all watchers.
today the morning has closed its eyes,
heedless of the insistent calls of the loud east winds,
and a thick veil has been drawn over the ever wakeful blue sky.
the woodlands have hushed their songs.
and the doors are shut at every house.
thou art the solitary wayfarer in this deserted street.
oh my only friend,
my best beloved,thegates are open in my home-do not pass by like adream.
art thou abroad on this stormy night on the journey of love, my friend?
the sky groans like one in despair.
i have no sleep tonight.
ever and again i open the door and look out in the darkness, my friend.
i can see nothing be fore me.
i wonder where lies thy path!
by what dim shore of the ink black river,
by what far edge of the frowning forest,
through what mazy depth of gloom art though threading thy course
to come to me ,,my friend?
-----Rabindranath tagore



the answer to the wayfarers questions
even if the shadows of the rainy July may be deep
even if the night may be silent,
they make the dawn more beautiful
they make the chirp of the bird more cheerful
it is you who feels the morning has closed its eyes
remember ,mans most dangerous weapon is courage and hope
do not think as a thick veil has been drawn over the ever wakeful blue sky
take it as a challenge and remember the spring that comes after the winter
the woodlands may have hushed their song
the doors may be shut at every house
but i am not all alone
millions like you follow after me
my loyal follower
i am right inside
just look around
we close the door after the guest comes in
you need to just open your eyes and hope to see me inside your house
i am not abroad ,i am right in your heart
i am with you in the journey of life
console my disciples ,so that the sky wont seem to be groaning in despair
sleep peace fully ,now that you know i am there
your path will reveal itself as you move forward.
even if the path is dark,there is always the candle of hope
i lead the path through the ink black river of evil
the far edge of the frowning forest of corruption
and the mazy depth of cunning.
for you and only you ..
manas godbole

Monday, March 1, 2010

It was a sleepless night,the night of the full moon
the light streaming in,from the window
like a homeless poor soul,wanting a shade for the night
on the night of the full moon.
Under the starry sky over the hills yonder,
could hear the wolves singing the praises of the moon,
right on the night of the full moon.
could hear a cart or a two pass by ,
in the bright of the starry sky,
could hear the crickets a chirping,
on the night of the full moon.
over the hill yonder,
on that night,
saw four backs pass
steal into a house,
on the night of the full moon.
then the 4 backs
stole out with four sacks
on the night of the full moon
the sound of the hooves
still rings in my ears
with the thought should i report?
'coz the four laden sacks
contained gold to be used for the poor
for the backs were none other than
the merry men of Sherwood forest