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EARLY EARTH
Study: Earth quickly managed ancient CO2

Fossilized spider was biggest ever
Lawrence, Kan. (UPI) Apr 21, 2011 - A 165-million-year-old fossilized spider with a 6-inch leg span, found in China, is the largest prehistoric spider ever found, a U.S. paleontologist says.

Paul Selden, a paleontologist from University of Kansas, said the fossil he discovered in Inner Mongolia is of a Golden Orb Weaver, giant spiders that can grow bigger than a human hand and that are still extant, The Daily Telegraph reported Thursday.

The fossil is so perfectly preserved experts were able not only to identify its species but confirm it was an adult female.

Golden Orb Weavers are "common and spectacular" inhabitants of tropical and subtropical regions, with females weaving webs of yellow silk 5 feet wide that shine like gold in sunlight, Selden said.

The fossil find, dubbed Nephila jurassica, suggests the climate in northern China was warm and humid millions of years ago, he said.

The discovery means "nephilids" are the longest-running genus known to man in terms of age, scientists said.

by Staff Writers
West Lafayette, Ind. (UPI) Apr 21, 2011
Earth may be able to recover from rising carbon dioxide emissions faster than previously thought, U.S. researchers studying prehistoric climate events say.

Scientists at Purdue University say when faced with high levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide and rising temperatures 56 million years ago, Earth increased its ability to pull carbon from the air.

Earth and atmospheric sciences Professor Gabriel Bowen said this led to a recovery that was quicker than predicted by many current models of the carbon cycle, though still on the order of tens of thousands of years, a university release reported Thursday.

"We found that more than half of the added carbon dioxide was pulled from the atmosphere within 30,000 to 40,000 years, which is one-third of the time span previously thought," Bowen said. "We still don't know exactly where this carbon went, but the evidence suggests it was a much more dynamic response than traditional models represent."

The Palaeocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum was an approximately 170,000-year-long period of global warming that has many features in common with the world's current situation.

"During this prehistoric event billions of tons of carbon was released into the ocean, atmosphere and biosphere, causing warming of about 5 degrees Celsius (9 degrees F)," Bowen said. "This is a good analog for the carbon being released from fossil fuels today."

A rapid growth of the biosphere, with a spread of forests, plants and carbon-rich soils to take in the excess carbon dioxide, could explain the quick recovery, he said.

"We need to figure out where the carbon went all those years ago to know where it could go in the future," he said.



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