Publication | Closed Access
Elevated Eocene Atmospheric CO <sub>2</sub> and Its Subsequent Decline
175
Citations
7
References
2006
Year
Ocean AcidificationOrganic GeochemistryBiogeochemistryCarbon SequestrationSubsequent DeclineSodium Carbonate MineralsEngineeringPaleoenvironmental ChangeGeochemistryEarth System ScienceAtmospheric ConcentrationGeochronologyPaleoclimatologyCarbon CycleEocene WarmthEarth ScienceEarth's ClimateAtmosphere Of Earth
Quantification of the atmospheric concentration of CO2 ([CO2]atm) during warm periods of Earth's history is important because burning of fossil fuels may produce future [CO2]atm approaching 1000 parts per million by volume (ppm). The early Eocene (~56 to 49 million years ago) had the highest prolonged global temperatures of the past 65 million years. High Eocene [CO2]atm is established from sodium carbonate minerals formed in saline lakes and preserved in the Green River Formation, western United States. Coprecipitation of nahcolite (NaHCO3) and halite (NaCl) from surface waters in contact with the atmosphere indicates [CO2]atm > 1125 ppm (four times preindustrial concentrations), which confirms that high [CO2]atm coincided with Eocene warmth.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1