Эртний аварга шувууны өндөгний хальс дэлхийн уур амьсгалын түүхийг өгүүлж байна

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Энэхүү мэдээ, нийтлэлийг хиймэл оюун боловсруулав.

Эрдэмтэд 15 сая гаруй жилийн өмнөх аварга шувууны өндөгний хальсанд хадгалагдсан хүчилтөрөгчийн изотопийг шинжилснээр тухайн үеийн ургамлын үйл ажиллагаа өнөөгийнхөөс 40 хувиар сул байсныг тогтоожээ.

Судлаачид Намибийн цөлийн бүсээс олдсон эртний аварга шувууны өндөгний хальсанд агуулагдах “хүчилтөрөгч-17” хэмээх ховор тогтвортой изотопийг лазерын дэвшилтэт технологийн тусламжтайгаар шинжилсэн байна. Энэхүү арга нь өмнөх аргуудтай харьцуулахад хамаагүй бага хэмжээний дээж шаарддаг тул ховор олдворуудыг гэмтээлгүйгээр нарийн судалгаа хийх боломж олгожээ. Агаарын мандал дахь хүчилтөрөгч-17 нь нарны гэрэл болон озоны нөлөөгөөр нүүрстөрөгчийн давхар исэлд шилжиж, улмаар ургамлын фотосинтезийн явцад агуулагдан, амьтны идсэн хоол, уусан ус, амьсгалсан агаараар дамжин өндөгний хальсанд үлдэгдэл болон хадгалагддаг байна.

Геологийн дунд Миоцений үе буюу 17-15 сая жилийн өмнөх үе нь дэлхийн дулаарлын процессыг судлахад чухал жишиг болдог. Тухайн үед агаар мандал дахь нүүрстөрөгчийн давхар ислийн хэмжээ өнөөгийнхөөс арай өндөр, дэлхийн дундаж температур илүү дулаан, далайн түвшин нэмэгдсэн байжээ. Энэхүү судалгааны үр дүн нь тухайн үеийн шим мандал хэрхэн ажиллаж байсныг ойлгох шинэ арга замыг нээж өгч байна.

Эрдэмтэд энэхүү судалгааны аргыг “Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta” сэтгүүлд нийтэлсэн бөгөөд одоогоор үр дүнгээ баталгаажуулахын тулд бусад лабораториудад дахин туршилт хийх шаардлагатай байгааг онцолжээ. Хэдийгээр судалгааны загваруудыг улам боловсронгуй болгох шаардлагатай ч, эртний өндөгний хальс нь дэлхийн уур амьсгал болон нүүрстөрөгчийн эргэлтийн түүхийг нээх үнэ цэнтэй “архив” болохыг уг ажил харуулж байна.

Дэлгэрэнгүйг эх сурвалжаас харах

↓Эх сурвалжийг нээх ↓

Fossil eggshells from giant birds that lived more than 15 million years ago have given scientists a new way to explore how Earth’s plants responded during a much warmer climate. By analyzing a rare form of oxygen preserved inside the shells, the team found evidence suggesting that plant activity may have been significantly lower than it is today.

The middle Miocene, between about 17 million and 15 million years ago, is one of the closest natural comparisons scientists have for a warmer Earth. Atmospheric carbon dioxide levels were slightly higher than today, global temperatures were warmer, sea levels were elevated, and much of the planet’s water had not yet become locked in the large polar ice sheets.

As reported in Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, fossil eggshells can preserve chemical signatures that reach much deeper into Earth’s history, offering a new way to investigate how the planet’s biosphere functioned millions of years ago.

Fossil Eggshells Hold A Rare Atmospheric Signature

The study focused on eggshells laid by extinct giant birds that once lived in what is now the Namib Desert, which stretches about 2,000 kilometers across Angola, Namibia, and South Africa. Inside the shells, researchers measured oxygen-17, a rare stable isotope that can reveal information about ancient atmospheric processes.

Oxygen-17 is transferred into carbon dioxide through reactions involving ozone and sunlight in the upper atmosphere. During photosynthesis, plants absorb this carbon dioxide, altering atmospheric oxygen-17 levels. Birds then preserve this isotopic signature in their eggshells through the air they breathe, the food they eat, and the water they drink.

Map of fossil eggshell collection sites, oxygen isotope data, and atmospheric CO₂ reconstruction spanning the Miocene to today. Credit: Map of fossil eggshell collection sites, oxygen isotope data, and atmospheric CO₂ reconstruction spanning the Miocene to today

Measuring oxygen-17 in fossils has long been a technical challenge because the isotope is so scarce. The researchers developed a laser-based technique that requires ten times less sample material than previous methods, making it possible to analyze these ancient fossils while preserving much more of each specimen.

A New Way To Measure Ancient Plant Productivity

The team used oxygen-17 to estimate primary productivity, the rate at which plants absorb atmospheric carbon dioxide through photosynthesis. Determining primary productivity directly for ecosystems that vanished millions of years ago is impossible. Even today’s satellites cannot measure every plant or reconstruct biological activity from the distant past. Scientists therefore rely on indirect indicators preserved in fossils and rocks.

Schematic Of The Oxygen 17 Pathway Used To Study Earth's 15 Million Year Old Atmosphere.
Schematic of the oxygen-17 pathway used to study Earth’s 15-million-year-old atmosphere. Credit: Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta

The study explains that oxygen-17 offers one such indicator. When plant growth is more active, more carbon dioxide, and with it oxygen-17, is removed from the atmosphere. Animals absorb that oxygen through normal biological processes, and its isotopic composition becomes locked inside hard tissues such as eggshells and teeth.

This approach extends well beyond the time covered by ice cores, allowing researchers to investigate periods of Earth’s history that were previously difficult to study using atmospheric evidence.

A Slowdown In Miocene Plant Activity

The prototype instrument was assembled during the first lockdown in 2020, after which the team spent three years analyzing dozens of fossil eggshell samples. The team found that around 15 million years ago, Earth’s biosphere appeared to be operating more slowly than it does today. Their measurements suggest that plants may have been about 40% less active at absorbing carbon dioxide than modern vegetation.

Researchers describe the findings as an early step. The models relating oxygen-17 in fossils to the global carbon cycle are still being refined, and independent laboratories will need to reproduce the results before they can be fully confirmed.

Conceptual Model Linking Oxygen Isotopes In Fossil Eggshells To Ancient Plant Productivity And Atmospheric Co₂.
Conceptual model linking oxygen isotopes in fossil eggshells to ancient plant productivity and atmospheric CO₂. Credit: Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta

Even so, the work demonstrates that fossil eggshells can preserve detailed chemical records of Earth’s ancient atmosphere. By unlocking those signals, researchers have introduced a new tool for studying how plants and the carbon cycle functioned during one of the planet’s best-known greenhouse climates.

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