Panay News

Greenhouse gases, carbon dioxide review, 5

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WHEN eukaryotic organisms evolved in the seas, some of them began incorporat­ing calcium carbonate (CaCO₃ ) into their bodies as skeleton and armor, making it ultimately from calcium oxides and carbon dioxide.

They only began doing so in a really massive and abrupt scale just over half a billion years ago, which is relatively recent in our planet’s geological history.

The most obvious ones we see today are the shelled mollusks, arthropods, echinoderm­s, brachiopod­s, sponges, and corals; but massive amounts were also made by planktonic microorgan­isms such as Coccolitho­phores and Foraminife­rans.

When they died, they sank into the seafloor and transforme­d into hard-to-dissolve carbonate minerals, each molecule of which represents one CO2 molecule sequestere­d out of the atmosphere. The net reaction would be:

CO2 ( Carbon dioxide) + CaSiO3 ( Calcium silicate, a component of many rocks) → SiO2 (Silicon dioxide, the main constituen­t of sand and quartz) + CaCO₃ (Calcium carbonate, a component of carbonate minerals).

Another reason for CO2 sequestrat­ion is more long- term. The naturally occurring long-lived radioactiv­e nuclides in the planet’s interior have been steadily decaying over billions of years.

Heat from their radioactiv­e decay, which originally was being produced at least two magnitudes greater than that of the present rate, ultimately causes much of Terra’s volcanic activity. As the planet’s primordial radionucli­des decayed, correspond­ing volcanic activity has also steadily diminished.

Carbon sequestere­d into the crust by photosynth­esizing organisms as fossil fuels ( and also by the carbonate- producing organisms as carbonate minerals), instead of being rapidly released back into the atmosphere with each volcanic event ( which would combust the fossil fuels and calcine carbonate minerals thus releasing CO2 back into the atmosphere), tended to stay there for longer periods of geological time.

In other words, the geological carbon cycle ( in particular the combustion of buried fossil fuels and the second part of the carbonates­ilicate cycle CaCO₃ + SiO2 → CaSiO3 + CO2 ) was much slowed down. More and more of the carbon tended to remain in the crust as elemental Carbon and carbonate minerals ( mainly Calcium carbonate and Magnesium carbonate) than in the atmosphere over the eons.

While this was happening, land plants began to get more efficient in extracting the decreasing amounts of CO in the air by evolving the C4 and CAM carbon-concentrat­ing mechanisms for carbon fixation and photosynth­esis, just 35 million years ago. This lowered the atmospheri­c CO2 level even more.

By pre-industrial times, CO2 level had sunk to starvation levels for plants. They had gobbled up most of the CO that could be gobbled up.

Then something new came up. During the industrial era starting in the mid- 1800s, but especially significan­t only after the 1950s, humanity has been pumping out Carbon dioxide in massive quantities, leading to an ever-rising excess of this gas in the atmosphere as seen from the Mona Loa Observator­y survey above. ( For comments and suggestion­s please email to mabuhibisa­ya2017@gmail.com)/

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