Scholarly Colloquia and Events

  • 10/20 Earth Sciences Seminar Series: Dr. Ben Black

    Department of Earth Sciences

    Fall 2023 Seminar Series

    10/20/2023

    12:30PM

    McHugh 306

     

     

    Dr. Ben Black - Rutgers University -http://rutgersvolcano.weebly.com

     

    Reconciling magma volume, gas release, and climate disruption through Earth’s history

     

    Magmas release gases that can play an important role in shaping Earth’s climate and surface environments. Prominent examples include sulfur-driven cooling in the wake of explosive eruptions and major mass extinctions in the case of some of the voluminous magmatic episodes known as Large Igneous Provinces.  However, the size of an eruption is only loosely correlated with the severity of its climate consequences, because processes in the mantle, magma storage/transport system, and atmosphere mediate the scale of outgassing and the climate response. Erupted deposits, considered in isolation, often provide an incomplete record of gas release that is apparently at odds with climate archives. In this talk, I demonstrate how the petrology of large-scale magmatic systems can be reconciled with contemporaneous climate proxies. Specifically, I will discuss: 1) uneven global climate disruption from the ~74ka Younger Toba Tuff and implications for early humans, 2) carbon release from the ~66 Ma Deccan Traps and implications for climate on the eve of the Cretaceous-Paleogene mass extinction, 3) suppressed sulfur release from Ontong Java, Earth’s largest known volcanic event, and 4) the role of cryptic outgassing in shaping recovery in the wake of volcanic outpourings.

    For more information, contact: Christin Donnelly at christin.donnelly@uconn.edu