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April 26, 2007 Scientists examining a spike in worldwide ocean temperatures 55 million years ago have linked it to massive volcanic eruptions that pushed Greenland and northwest Europe apart to create the Writing in the journal Science, geologists at "That prehistoric volcanic activity released more than 2000 gigatonnes (billion metric tons) of carbon into the oceans and atmosphere in the form of methane and carbon dioxide – two potent greenhouse gases," said Michael Storey of The scientists have used precise dating techniques to match a layer of volcanic ash that covers ocean floor sediments of that era with a layer in East Greenland and the Faeroes Islands (north of Scotland), where the ash overlies sequences of basaltic lava. These lavas, which form a layered sequence up to seven kilometers thick, are relics of massive flows from the mid-Atlantic ridge and other fissures along which North America and "Scientists have known of this major prehistoric global warming episode, called the Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum, or PETM, for some time," said Carl Swisher, professor of geological sciences at To establish common ages of the PETM-era marine ash layer and the rock formations, the scientists measured the amounts of argon gas trapped in volcanic minerals. That dating method, performed in labs at the three universities, renders precise ages in geological time frames, based on known decay rates of potassium to argon trapped in the volcanic material.
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