Wednesday, 4 July 2018

Earth's First Animals Sparked Global Warming, Too


By Mindy Weisberger, Senior Writer | July 2, 2018 01:54pm ET

Ancient marine creatures stirred things up in Earth's atmosphere hundreds of millions of years ago, by burrowing in the ocean bottom.
What do humans have in common with the first animals that appeared on Earth? We're both responsible for global warming events (though, human-driven climate change is unfolding — and accelerating — over decades, rather than over millions of years).
About 520 million to 540 million years ago, life began booming in Earth's oceans, with diverse marine creatures digging busily in seafloor sediments and munching up organic matter. But as they did so, they were unwittingly sowing the seeds of a global climate crisis, according to a new study.
Little did these early animals know, but over the next 100 million years their burrowing habits would drive a major buildup of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide (CO2) in the planet's atmosphere.


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