How did volcanism trigger climate change before the eruptions started?
As our climate warms beyond its historical range, scientists increasingly need to study climates deeper in the planetβs past to get information about our future. One object of study is a warming event known as the Miocene Climate Optimum (MCO) from about 17 to 15 million years ago. It coincided with floods of basalt lava that covered a large area of the Northwestern US, creating what are called the βColumbia River Basalts.β This timing suggests that volcanic CO2 was the cause of the warming.
Those eruptions were the most recent example of a βLarge Igneous Province,β a phenomenon that has repeatedly triggered climate upheavals and mass extinctions throughout Earthβs past. The Miocene version was relatively benign; it saw CO2Β levels and global temperatures rise, causing ecosystem changes and significant melting of Antarctic ice,Β but didnβt trigger a mass extinction.
A paper just published in Geology, led by Jennifer Kasbohm of the Carnegie Scienceβs Earth and Planets Laboratory, upends the idea that the eruptions triggered the warming while still blaming them for the peak climate warmth.