『Abstract
We examine the role that flood basalt eruptions may have played
during times of mass extinction through the release of volcanic
gases. Continental flood basalt provinces have formed by numerous
eruptions over a short period of geologic time, characteristically
a few million years. Within this period, a short-lived climactic
phase that lasts about 1Ma typically emplaces a large proportion
of the lava volume. This phase consists of a series of huge eruptions,
each yielding 103-104 km3 of
magma. Each eruption lasted on the order of a decade or more,
and built an immense pahoehoe(aの頭に-)-dominated
lava flow field by eruptive activity along fissures tens to hundreds
of km long. High fire-fountains, emanating from vents along the
fissures, at times sustained eruption columns that lofted gas
and ash into the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere while
the lava flows covered huge areas. The combination of large eruption
magnitudes, maintained high effusion rates during eruptions, and
the repeated nature of the characteristic, large-scale eruptive
activity occurs in Earth history only during periods of flood
basalt volcanism. Based on recent analogs and determination of
volatile contents of ancient flood basalt lavas, we estimate that
individual eruptions were capable of releasing 10,000 Tg of SO2, resulting in atmospheric loading of 1000 Tg
a-1 during a sustained decade-long eruptive event.
We apply this model of flood basalt volcanism to estimate the
potential mass of CO2 and SO2
released during formation of the 〜65 Ma Deccan province. The Deccan
lava-pile contains enormous pahoehoe(aの頭に-)
flow-fields erupted within a period of about 1 Ma. Consequently,
atmospheric perturbations associated with SO2
emissions from just one of these long-lasting eruptions were likely
to have been severe, and constantly augmented over a decade or
longer. By contrast, the amounts of CO2 released
would have been small compared with the mass already present in
the atmosphere, and thus much more limited in effect. Individual
eruptions were followed by hiatuses of hundreds to thousands of
years during which the gas contributions to the atmosphere would
be recycled. It is clear that the nature and potential atmospheric
impact of a series of huge-volume, repeated, long-term degassing
events requires further investigation in conjunction with appropriate
climate models.
Keywords: flood basalts; eruptions; Deccan province; sulphur gas;
carbon dioxide; Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary』
1. Introduction
2. The extreme nature of continental flood basalt volcanism
3. Estimating volatile release from flood basalt eruptions
3.1. Carbon dioxide
3.2. Sulphur degassing
4. Assessing amounts of sulphur volatiles released during flood
basalt province formation
4.1. Deccan stratigraphy and lava volumes erupted
4.2. Example estimate of sulphur release during a single Deccan
eruptive event
4.3. Estimates of sulphur gas release over the time span of Deccan
volcanism
5. Potential effects of CO2, SO2,
and sulphuric acid (H2SO4)
aerosols
6. Conclusions
Acknowledgements
References