The report says: ‘Many scientists believe that ocean acidification from high carbon dioxide levels will reduce the calcium carbonate in algae, especially in the near future. The data, however, suggest the opposite occurred over the 15 million years before the current global warming spell.’ Evidence meets ‘greenhouse gas’ based climate theory, which struggles. Time for a re-think?
A key theory that attributes the climate evolution of the Earth to the breakdown of Himalayan rocks may not explain the cooling over the past 15 million years, according to a Rutgers-led study.
The study in the journal Nature Geoscience could shed more light on the causes of long-term climate change, says Phys.org.
It centers on the long-term cooling that occurred before the recent global warming tied to greenhouse gas emissions from humanity.
“The findings of our study, if substantiated, raise more questions than they answered,” said senior author Yair Rosenthal, a distinguished professor in the Department of Marine and Coastal Sciences in the School of Environmental and Biological Sciences at Rutgers University-New Brunswick. “If the cooling is not due to enhanced Himalayan rock weathering, then what processes have been overlooked?”
For decades, the leading hypothesis has been that the collision of the Indian and Asian continents and uplifting of the Himalayas brought fresh rocks to the Earth’s surface, making them more vulnerable to weathering that captured and stored carbon dioxide—a key greenhouse gas. But that hypothesis remains unconfirmed.
Lead author Weimin Si, a former Rutgers doctoral student now at Brown University, and Rosenthal challenge the hypothesis and examined deep-sea sediments rich with calcium carbonate.
Over millions of years, the weathering of rocks captured carbon dioxide and rivers carried it to the ocean as dissolved inorganic carbon, which is used by algae to build their calcium carbonate shells. When algae die, their skeletons fall on the seafloor and get buried, locking carbon from the atmosphere in deep-sea sediments.
If weathering increases, the accumulation of calcium carbonate in the deep sea should increase.
But after studying dozens of deep-sea sediment cores through an international ocean drilling program, Si found that calcium carbonate in shells decreased significantly over 15 million years, which suggests that rock weathering may not be responsible for the long-term cooling.
Full article here.
Reblogged this on Climate- Science.press.
Once again, CO2 as the control knob.
CO2 as driver of warming, another snipe hunt.
‘But after studying dozens of deep-sea sediment cores through an international ocean drilling program, Si found that calcium carbonate in shells decreased significantly over 15 million years, which suggests that rock weathering may not be responsible for the long-term cooling.’
Therefore *something else* is responsible 🤔
– – –
‘A key theory that attributes the climate evolution of the Earth to the breakdown of Himalayan rocks may not explain the cooling over the past 15 million years, according to a Rutgers-led study.’
So the ‘key theory’ is looking busted, if the study is correct.
“The findings of our study, if substantiated, raise more questions than they answered,”
That’s the kind of science I like.
60 million years ago the Himalayas were under water. Here is neat geology teaching tool that shows India colliding with the rest of Asia:
https://media.hhmi.org/biointeractive/earthviewer_web/earthviewer.html
Willy Soon is a riot. Take a look at his information about “Ocean Acidification”:
Talking of being wrong…
Nature paper on ocean warming retracted
Nature is retracting a 2018 paper which found that the oceans are warming much faster than predicted by previous models of climate change.
https://retractionwatch.com/2019/09/25/nature-paper-on-ocean-warming-retracted/
– – –
But it took about 10 months to do so, giving alarmists plenty of time to quote it as ‘evidence’ of climate problems
From the linked paper …
Many scientists believe that ocean acidification from high carbon dioxide levels will reduce the calcium carbonate in algae, especially in the near future. The data, however, suggest the opposite occurred over the 15 million years before the current global warming spell.
An imaginatively beautified theory overturned by some less handsome facts.
Oh dear, how sad, never mind …
If the cooling is not due to enhanced Himalayan rock weathering, then what processes have been overlooked?
The ocean.
Warmist science routinely forgets the existence of the 4km layer of water covering 70% of the earth’s surface.