Balance of nature: global warming and ozone layer (Introduction)

by David Turell @, Wednesday, January 08, 2025, 16:26 (14 days ago) @ David Turell

Another general process giving us a wonderful Earth:

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/01/250107161833.htm

If you like the smell of spring roses, the sounds of summer birdsong, and the colors of fall foliage, you have the stabilization of the ozone layer to thank for it. Located in the stratosphere, where it shields the Earth from harmful ultraviolet radiation, the ozone layer plays a key role in preserving the planet's biodiversity.

And now we may have a better idea of why that took so long -- more than 2 billion years -- to happen.

According to a new, Yale-led study, Earth's early atmosphere hosted a battle royale between iodine and oxygen -- effectively delaying the creation of a stable ozone layer that would shield complex life from much of the sun's ultraviolet radiation (UVR).

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Indeed, scientists have long wondered why land plants did not emerge on Earth until 450 million years ago, even though their progenitors, cyanobacteria, had been in existence for 2.7 billion years. Likewise, there are no fossils for complex land animals or plants before the Cambrian era (541 to 485 million years ago) despite the evidence of much older microfossils.

"The only existing explanation states that this delay is an intrinsic characteristic of evolution -- that an enormous amount of time is required," said Noah Planavsky, a professor of Earth and planetary sciences, faculty member of the Yale Center for Natural Carbon Capture, and senior author of the new study. "Yet that notion fails to explain how and why complex life originated and diversified."

The new study suggests that something beyond the need for time was responsible: the delayed stabilization of Earth's ozone layer, caused by elevated marine iodine concentrations that prevented a protective UVR shield from forming in the atmosphere.

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For the study, a Yale-led research team analyzed multiple lines of independent geological evidence and developed an ocean-atmosphere model to reconstruct the iodine-ozone dynamics for the early Earth. The researchers found that elevated marine iodide content (formed when iodine combines with another element to form a salt) prevailed through most of Earth's history, which would have led to significant inorganic iodine emissions into the atmosphere after the rise of oxygen -- with the potential for disrupting ozone.

The mechanism of ozone destruction by iodine is similar to the process by which chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) created the "ozone hole" over Antarctica. When CFCs undergo photolysis, they release reactive chlorine, which catalytically destroys ozone in the stratosphere, leading to as much as a 50% depletion over continental Antarctica at the peak of the problem.

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Liu noted that at a global scale, unstable and low ozone levels likely persisted from 2.4 billion years ago until roughly half a billion years ago. "During this interval, even under high levels of oxygen production, atmospheric ozone could have been very low and was likely unstable, leading to periodic or persistent high fluxes of solar UVR at Earth's surface," Liu said.

Comment: another example of contingent processes which had to follow a certain course to give us eh Earth we have now. Chance or design?


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