Ancient volcanic activity reveals climate threshold for ocean deoxygenation

Ancient volcanic activity reveals climate threshold for ocean deoxygenation

Massive volcanic carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions contributing to an extreme global ocean deoxygenation event over 120 million years ago has modern day implications for understanding a climate warming “tipping point,” according to new research published in Nature, led by a scientist at Ocean Networks Canada, a University of Victoria initiative. Massive volcanic carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions contributing to an extreme global ocean deoxygenation event over 120 million years ago has modern day implications for understanding a climate warming “tipping point,” according to new research published in Nature, led by a scientist at Ocean Networks Canada, a University of Victoria initiative. Earth Sciences Environment Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *