Anoxic event facts for kids
An anoxic event (AE) is an event in which parts of the ocean have become low in oxygen (O2) below the surface levels, or when all the oxygen has gone. They may be called oceanic anoxic events or deep ocean anoxic events.
Major anoxic events have happened, though not for millions of years. The geological record of organic-rich sediment (black shales) shows that they happened in the past. However, only "in rare, extreme cases, [did] euxinia lead to biotic crises. [The] hypothesis [is] best supported by evidence from the end-Permian mass extinction".
Anoxic events may have caused mass extinctions. These mass extinctions were so characteristic that they have been used by geologists as markers in biostratigraphic dating. Typically, oceanic anoxic events last for under half a million years, before a full recovery.
There are several places on earth today that show the features of anoxic events on a localized level. 'Dead zones' exist off the East Coast of the United States in the Chesapeake Bay, in the Scandinavian strait Kattegat, the Black Sea, in the northern Adriatic and off the coast of Louisiana.
Contents
Events which may have caused anoxic events
It is not known why anoxic events may have happened. Some ideas include:
- Global warm climate leading to a huge growth of biomass.
- High rainfall sweeping organic material down into the oceans.
- Deep water circulation between poles and the equator stopping.
- Oceanic oxygen being used up, and not being replaced fast enough.
- Poisonous hydrogen sulphide collecting in the oceans.
- Oceans becoming hostile to most forms of life
All of these events may have caused mass extinction in the seas, changing ways in which all animals which feed on sea creatures.
Historic examples
Jurassic
- Toarcian event 183 million years ago (mya)
Lower Cretaceous
- Aptian: mid-Aptian extinction event, 116/7 mya.
Upper Cretaceous
- Cenomanian–Turonian boundary event: black shale deposition in ocean basins. 91.5 (±8.6) mya.
Cainozoic
- Palaeocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM), 55.8 mya.
Images for kids
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Map of aquatic dead zones, January 2008. The red circles map the sizes and sites of dead zones with the black dots signifying a dead zone of unknown size. The size and number of marine dead zones—areas where the deep water is so low in dissolved oxygen that sea creatures can't survive—have grown explosively in the past half-century. – NASA Earth Observatory
See also
In Spanish: Evento anóxico para niños