Ficheiro:Phanerozoic Carbon Dioxide.png

Phanerozoic_Carbon_Dioxide.png(586 × 409 píxeles; tamaño do ficheiro: 62 kB; tipo MIME: image/png)

Esta imaxe (ou todas as imaxes deste artigo ou categoría) deberían volverse crear como imaxes vectoriais SVG. Isto proporciona moitas vantaxes, véxase Commons:Media for cleanup (en inglés) para máis información. Se xa hai unha versión SVG desta imaxe dispoñible, por favor, cárguea en Commons. Tras subila, substitúa este modelo polo modelo {{vector version available|novo nome da imaxe.svg}} nesta imaxe.

Resumo

This figure shows estimates of the changes in carbon dioxide concentrations during the Phanerozoic. Three estimates are based on geochemical modeling: GEOCARB III (Berner and Kothavala 2001), Carbon-Oxygen-Phosphorus-Sulfur-Evolution COPSE (Bergman et al. 2004) and Rothman (2001). These are compared to the carbon dioxide measurement database of Royer et al. (2004) and a 30 Myr filtered average of those data. Error envelopes are shown when they were available. The right hand scale shows the ratio of these measurements to the estimated average for the last several million years (the Quaternary). Customary labels for the periods of geologic time appear at the bottom.

Direct determination of past carbon dioxide levels relies primarily on the interpretation of carbon isotopic ratios in fossilized soils (paleosols) or the shells of phytoplankton and through interpretation of stomatal density in fossil plants. Each of these is subject to substantial systematic uncertainty.

Estimates of carbon dioxide changes through geochemical modeling instead rely on quantifying the geological sources and sinks for carbon dioxide over long time scales particularly: volcanic inputs, erosion and carbonate deposition. As such, these models are largely independent of direct measurements of carbon dioxide.

Both measurements and models show considerable uncertainty and variation; however, all point to carbon dioxide levels in the past that have been signifcantly higher than they are at present. While the GEOCARB Carbon dioxide levels in the most part of the Phanerzoic Eon shows a fit and resulting climate sensitivity similar to todays values, the early Phanerozoic includes a global ice age during the Ordovician age combined with high atmospheric carbon contents based on the same project. There have been different speculations about the reasons but no acknowledged mechanism so far.

Copyright

This figure was prepared by Robert A. Rohde from published data and is incorporated into the Global Warming Art project.

Image from Global Warming Art
This image is an original work created for Global Warming Art. Please refer to the Carbon Dioxide.png image description page for more information.
GNU head Autorízase a copia, distribución e/ou modificación deste documento baixo os termos da licenza de documentación libre GNU, versión 1.2 ou calquera outra que posteriormente publique a Free Software Foundation; sen seccións invariables, textos de portada, nin textos de contraportada. Inclúese unha copia da devandita licenza na sección titulada GNU Free Documentation License.
w:gl:Creative Commons
recoñecemento compartir igual
Este ficheiro está licenciado baixo a licenza Creative Commons recoñecemento compartir igual 3.0 sen adaptar.
Vostede é libre de:
  • compartir – copiar, distribuír e difundir a obra
  • facer obras derivadas – adaptar a obra
Baixo as seguintes condicións:
  • recoñecemento – Debe indicar a debida atribución de autoría, fornecer unha ligazón á licenza e indicar se se realizaron cambios. Pode facer isto de calquera forma razoable, mais non nunha forma que indique que quen posúe a licenza apoia ou subscribe o seu uso da obra.
  • compartir igual – Se altera, transforma ou amplía este contido, debe publicar as súas contribucións baixo a mesma licenza ou outra compatible á orixinal.
A etiqueta desta licenza engadiuse a este ficheiro como parte da actualización da licenza GFDL.


References

  1. Bergman, Noam M., Timothy M. Lenton, and Andrew J. Watson (2004). "COPSE: A new model of biogeochemical cycling over Phanerozoic time". American Journal of Science 304: 397–437.
  2. Berner, RA and Z. Kothavala (2001). "GEOCARB III: A revised model of atmospheric CO2 over Phanerozoic time". American Journal of Science 301: 182-204.
  3. Gradstein, FM and JG Ogg (1996). "A Phanerozoic time scale". Episodes 19: 3-5.
  4. Gradstein, FM, JG Ogg and AG Smith (2005) A geologic time scale 2004, Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521786738
  5. Rothman, Daniel H. (2001). "Atmospheric carbon dioxide levels for the last 500 million years". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 99 (7): 4167-4171.
  6. Royer, Dana L., Robert A. Berner, Isabel P. Montañez, Neil J. Tabor, and David J. Beerling (2004). "CO2 as a primary driver of Phanerozoic climate". GSA Today 14 (3): 4-10. doi:10.1130/1052-5173(2004)014<4:CAAPDO>2.0.CO;2
  7. Veizer, J., Godderis, Y. & Francois. L.M., Evidence for decoupling of atmospheric CO2 and global climate during the Phanerozoic eon. Nature 408, 698-701 (2000) [1]
  8. Nir J. Shaviv, Ján Veizer: Celestial driver of Phanerozoic climate?, Geological Society of America Vol. 13, Issue 7 (Juliy 2003), S. 4–10, Online (pdf 454 KByte)[2]

Notes

  1. All data except GEOCARB III appear on the 2004 geologic time scale (Gradstein et al. 2005). GEOCARB III appears on the Gradstein & Ogg (1996) time scale.
  2. All models are reported in terms of the ratio of past CO2 concentrations to "present" CO2 concentrations, where "present" represents some average value for the last few million years. To compare to direct measurements a value of 260 ppmv is chosen for the recent period, with an uncertainty of 10-15%.
  3. No models are capable of resolving changes faster than ~10 Myr.
  4. Measurements based on the interpretation of paleosols sometimes result in apparent CO2 concentrations < 0 ppmv. These were set to 0 ppmv.
  5. Different measurements in the Royer et al. compilation come from different authors and involve different techniques. As such the error bars are not necessarily comparable. For example, some sources may have included only statistical measurement error, whereas others may have included statistical and systematic errors. Other measurements report no uncertainty at all. Because of these factors, the error measurements were ignored when determining the 30 Myr measurement average.
Anotacións
InfoField
Esta imaxe ten anotacións: Olle as anotacións en Commons

Pés de foto

Engada unha explicación dunha liña do representa este ficheiro
Atmospheric CO₂ in parts per million by volume (ppmv) over the last half billion years.

Elementos retratados neste ficheiro

representa a

Historial do ficheiro

Prema nunha data/hora para ver o ficheiro tal e como estaba nese momento.

Data/HoraMiniaturaDimensiónsUsuarioComentario
actual26 de agosto de 2019 ás 01:16Miniatura da versión ás 01:16 do 26 de agosto de 2019586 × 409 (62 kB)SaippuakauppiasInverted figure and axes, so that time evolves from left to right.
25 de febreiro de 2006 ás 21:38Miniatura da versión ás 21:38 do 25 de febreiro de 2006584 × 407 (31 kB)Merikanto~commonswikiClass Paleoklimatology, Phanerozoic Carbon Dioxide curve.

Non hai páxinas que usen este ficheiro.

Uso global do ficheiro

Os seguintes wikis empregan esta imaxe:

Metadatos