Ireland and Scotland still hold rocks with rare evidence of ‘snowball Earth’: Study

Ireland and Scotland still hold rocks with rare evidence of 'snowball Earth': Study

Researchers from University College London (UCL) have made a groundbreaking discovery in Ireland and Scotland, uncovering a rock formation that may carry a complete record of the “snowball Earth” period. This rare find, published in the Journal of the Geological Society of London, details how the Port Askaig Formation, which consists of layers of rock up to 1.1 kilometers thick, was likely deposited between 662 and 720 million years ago during the Sturtian glaciation.

Significance of the discovery

The Sturtian glaciation marks the first time Earth experienced a global freeze, a period during which the planet was almost entirely covered in ice. This event played a crucial role in the development of complex, multicellular organisms, with the first evidence of such life appearing shortly after Earth thawed.

The Unique rock formation

Located on the Scottish islands known as the Garvellachs, this formation is particularly significant because it captures the transition from a warm, tropical Earth to a snowball Earth. Unlike similar rock formations found in North America and Namibia, which lack evidence of this critical transition, the Port Askaig Formation offers a rare and complete geological record.

Insights from the researchers

Professor Graham Shields, a senior author from UCL Earth Sciences, emphasized the importance of these rocks in recording a time when Earth was entirely covered in ice. He noted that this deep freeze was a precursor to the emergence of complex life forms. Elias Rugen, the study’s first author and a PhD candidate at UCL Earth Sciences, highlighted that the study provides the first conclusive age constraints for these Scottish and Irish rocks, confirming their global significance.

Rugen explained that the rock layers exposed on the Garvellachs are globally unique. Beneath the layers formed during the Sturtian glaciation, there are 70 meters of older carbonate rocks that were formed in tropical waters, recording a gradual cooling of Earth’s climate.

Implications

This discovery is particularly remarkable because, in most parts of the world, the ancient glaciers from the Sturtian glaciation scraped away underlying rocks, erasing the evidence of this transition. However, in Scotland, the transition remains preserved, offering a rare glimpse into Earth’s climatic history.

The Sturtian glaciation, which lasted for 60 million years, is one of two major freezing periods within the Cryogenian Period (635 to 720 million years ago). This research not only sheds light on the Earth’s past climate but also provides critical insights into the conditions that may have led to the emergence of complex life on the planet.

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