
Ancient glaciers reshaped Earth's surface, fueling the rise of complex life on Earth, scientists say
Inch by inch, as massive glaciers crept over frozen land toward an ice-covered sea, they scoured the ground beneath them, gouging and scraping rocks from Earth's crust. When the glaciers eventually melted, they released a torrent of terrestrial chemicals into the ocean, researchers recently reported. Minerals swept up on land by this 'glacial broom' altered marine chemistry and infused oceans with nutrients that they say may have shaped how complex life evolved.
This ancient period of deep freeze, known as the Neoproterozoic Era, or 'Snowball Earth,' lasted from about 1 billion to 543 million years ago. During that time, landmasses consolidated into a supercontinent called Rodinia and then broke apart again. Earth's earliest forms of life, such as microbes, cyanobacteria, sponges and seafloor-dwelling organisms, populated the oceans. After the end of the Neoproterozoic came the rise of more complex life, with the first appearance of marine creatures sporting armor, shells and spikes.
Scientists have attributed this evolutionary boom to increased oxygen levels in Earth's atmosphere and in shallow ocean waters. And now, research published Tuesday in the journal Geology suggests the flowing of ancient glaciers may have directly shaped chemical changes in the ocean that were critical for the evolution of complex organisms.
Studying Snowball Earth offers a window into our planet's past, but it also presents valuable insights into modern climate change, lead study author Dr. Chris Kirkland said.
'Our deep time geological record indicates how changing one part of Earth affects another,' he said. Right now, the dramatic warming of the planet that marks the human-fueled climate crisis is happening at breakneck speed compared with these ancient processes that took millions of years.
'This rapid pace limits Earth's ability to naturally regulate itself, underscoring the urgency of addressing anthropogenic climate change.'
From snowball Earth to hothouse planet
Glacier movement, or glaciation, is known to scrape up and ferry terrestrial sediments into oceans, lakes and rivers, forming the basis of aquatic food webs. However, researchers who study ancient Earth were previously uncertain whether Neoproterozoic glaciers moved at all, let alone enough to erode the ground beneath them and transfer minerals into the sea.
'It had been hypothesized that widespread glacial erosion of continental interiors could be caused by the Snowball Earth ice,' said Kirkland, a professor in the School of Earth and Planetary Sciences at Curtin University in Perth, Australia. 'However, aspects of this idea were not clear because that ice may not have moved or moved only slightly or indeed even flowed.'
Kirkland and his colleagues found answers in Scotland and Northern Ireland, where they studied sediments from rock formations dating to the Neoproterozoic. The team looked at zircons — crystallized minerals that are exceptionally durable and can weather extreme geological events. Zircons also contain uranium; by measuring the stages of uranium's decay in zircons, geologists use the minerals as chronometers for studying Earth's past.
The researchers examined sediments dating to the time when Earth was covered with ice, and from the 'hothouse Earth' period millions of years later when the ice was gone, and found the mineral composition of Snowball Earth sediments differed dramatically from that of later sediments.
'We recovered distinctive patterns in the populations of these mineral grains,' Kirkland told CNN in an email. 'In essence the 'DNA' fingerprint of these sedimentary rocks changed.'
The findings appear to bolster the notion of active glaciation 'somewhat,' said Dr. Graham Shields, a professor of geology at University College London. Shields was not involved in the new research. However, the study did not include data from a significant glacial interval called the Marinoan, which marked the end of Snowball Earth, he told CNN in an email. Shields was also cautious about directly linking glacial erosion to the evolution of complex life.
'This connection has been proposed before but it is controversial because the linkage is assumed rather than explained,' Shields said. 'Dramatic landscape change causing the emergence of macroscopic animals is a neat idea, but the paper introduces a hypothesis about glacial erosion/weathering that can be tested, rather than settling the debate.'
Mass glacier thaw transforms oceans
Rocks from the time of Snowball Earth contained older minerals, but also featured a range of mineral ages, hinting that the rocks were exposed and eroded over time by the scraping movement of glaciers. This evidence told the scientists that the glaciers of the Neoproterozoic were mobile. Younger rocks, from when Snowball Earth was thawing, had a narrower range of mineral ages, and more fragile grains were absent, suggesting flowing water had dissolved material that was previously ground down.
At the waning of the Neoproterozoic, one of the known changes in ocean chemistry was a rise in uranium. Other research had previously explained this increase as resulting from the rise in atmospheric oxygen, 'however, our data imply that the delivery of chemical elements into the oceans also played a role in this,' Kirkland said.
'The 'lost' dissolved component in these rocks is seen 'popping back up' in changes in ocean chemistry at this time,' he added. By mapping these changes in terrestrial and marine environments, 'we are imaging the transfer of chemical elements through the Earth as a system.'
The scientists reported that major glaciation events took place at least twice between 720 million and 635 million years ago. By the end of the Neoproterozoic, as Earth's icy cover began to thaw, major chemistry shifts were taking place in Earth's atmosphere and oceans.
'The end of these glaciations is marked by rapid increases in atmospheric and oceanic oxygen, possibly due to enhanced weathering of exposed rock surfaces and increased nutrient fluxes into the ocean,' Kirkland said. Such changes could have infused nutrient cycles and provided emerging life with the boost it needed to evolve into more complex forms.
'The idea that glacial debris from Neoproterozoic ice ages provided nutrients to support early animal evolution has been around for a while,' said Dr. Andrew Knoll, a professor emeritus of Earth and planetary sciences at Harvard University, who was not involved in the new research. However, questions remain about whether the minerals poured into the ocean by Neoproterozoic glaciation would have been enough to spur long-term environmental changes with biological consequences, Knoll told CNN in an email.
Other research previously suggested that the impacts of glaciation events, such as the ones described in the new study, 'might well have only transient consequences — a bolus of nutrients raising primary production and perhaps increasing oxygen levels, before relaxing back to the earlier state of the environment,' Knoll said. The new findings are 'an interesting addition to the conversation,' he added. 'But the conversation continues.'
Lessons for today's climate crisis
From the Neoproterozoic to the present, similar processes shape climate change, including the role played by carbon dioxide (CO2) and the behavior of feedback loops, when a process feeds into an existing aspect of Earth's climate system and intensifies it. Ancient climate evidence also illuminates what happens during climate tipping points — when a threshold is crossed, triggering large-scale changes that are often irreversible.
Today, Earth is heating up rapidly rather than cooling gradually over time. It took millions of years for glaciation to overtake the planet during Earth's snowball phase, while modern warming is accelerating over mere decades, 'much faster than past natural climate shifts,' Kirkland said.
However, climate change's global progress is still mapped by studying the interplay of CO2 buildup, feedback loops and tipping points, he added.
'We can see how different parts of the planet are interrelated via chemical links,' he said. 'Change one part of the system, other parts also change.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
5 hours ago
- New York Post
Massive, mysterious ‘hot blob' beneath Eastern US is moving toward New York, puzzling scientists
Is this the start of Goo York City? UK scientists have discovered a massive 'blob' of rock underneath the Appalachian mountains that's slowly oozing its way toward New York City, per a slimy new study published in the journal Geology. 'This thermal upwelling has long been a puzzling feature of North American geology,' the study's lead author, Tom Gernon, Professor of Earth Science at the University of Southampton, said in a statement. Officially dubbed the Northern Appalachian Anomaly (NAA), this subterranean slimeball sits 125 feet deep underground and extends 220 miles across New England. The team reportedly discovered it using seismic tomography, a method akin to taking a giant CAT scan of the Earth. 4 Fortunately, the blob won't reach NYC for at least 10 million years, per the study. Christopher Sadowski While originally thought to have formed 180 million years ago when North America broke away from Africa, the new research suggests that it appeared 80 million years ago when the precursor landmasses to Canada and Greenland were splitting apart, LiveScience reported. 'It lies beneath part of the continent that's been tectonically quiet for 180 million years, so the idea that it was just a leftover from when the landmass broke apart never quite stacked up,' said Gernon. In a study published last year in the Journal Nature, the team described how this molten mantle molasses is created when hot rock sitting just outside the Earth's core rises to fill cracks in the crust caused by land rifts. When this material eventually cools, it sinks or 'drips,' causing a ripple effect along the lower surfaces of the continents that has been called 'mantle waves.' 4 uplift the Appalachians, explaining why the mountain range remains so high despite significant erosion over the past 20 million years. Dana – By using a combination of direct geological observations, computer simulations and model plate tectonics and geodynamics, the team was able to replicate the formation of a hot blob 1,120 miles northeast of the Appalachians. They found that the primordial ooze was moving southwest at a clip of 12 miles every million years. 4 A map showing how the Appalachian Mountains may have split from Greenland around 80 million years ago. University of Southampton Fortunately, we don't need to prepare for an a-blob-alypse anytime soon. At this rate, researchers estimate that blob-zilla will reach NYC in 10 to 15 million years, like a very slow-moving B-movie monster — it takes a while for underground movements to make a splash in the Big Apple. 4 'It (the blob) lies beneath part of the continent that's been tectonically quiet for 180 million years, so the idea that it was just a leftover from when the landmass broke apart never quite stacked up,' said lead author Tom Gernon. 06photo – The simulation also showed that the blob may have helped uplift the Appalachians, explaining why the mountain range remains so high despite significant erosion over the past 20 million years. 'Heat at the base of a continent can weaken and remove part of its dense root, making the continent lighter and more buoyant, like a hot air balloon rising after dropping its ballast,' said Gernon 'This would have caused the ancient mountains to be further uplifted over the past million years.' After the blob departs the region, however, the Earth's crust will settle once again and erosion will 'continue to wear down the mountains, gradually lowering their elevation,' the scientist said. This seismic syrup is perhaps also the reason why rare volcanic eruptions can help bring diamonds to the surface, per the study. While the study was predominantly centered around the NAA, the team also focused on its twin, an anomalous hot zone situated beneath North Central Greenland. This tectonic lava lamp, which was created during the same continental fragmentation but on the other side of the rift like a molasses-y mirror, generates heat currents at the base of the miles-thick ice sheet, influencing how the ice moves and melts today. 'Ancient heat anomalies continue to play a key role in shaping the dynamics of continental ice sheets from below,' Gernon said. 'Even though the surface shows little sign of ongoing tectonics, deep below, the consequences of ancient rifting are still playing out.'
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
Massive Earthquake Could Strike Canada as Ancient Fault Line Wakes
The Tintina fault stretches 1,000 kilometers (621 miles) across northern Canada, crossing the Yukon and ending in Alaska. The fault is thought to have been dormant for 40 million years, but that thinking is challenged by a new study that suggests a major earthquake may be imminent. Researchers from the University of Victoria and the University of Alberta in Canada have spotted signs of two relatively recent groups of earthquakes that significantly shifted the ground: one 2.6 million years ago and one 132,000 years ago. What's more, the team found no evidence of notable earthquakes within the last 12,000 years. That quiet period could actually a warning; based on calculations that the fault is shifting and building up pressure at the rate of 0.2–0.8 millimeters (0.008–0.03 inches) per year, it means a major quake may be imminent. Related: "Over the past couple of decades there have been a few small earthquakes of magnitude 3 to 4 detected along the Tintina fault, but nothing to suggest it is capable of large ruptures," says geologist Theron Finley from the University of Victoria. "The expanding availability of high-resolution data prompted us to re-examine the fault, looking for evidence of prehistoric earthquakes in the landscape." Using a combination of the latest high-resolution satellite imagery and LIDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) technology – measuring laser light reflections to assess terrain levels – the team carried out a fresh look at the Tintina fault. This close analysis helped reveal narrow surface ruptures that are usually well concealed by Canada's forested wilderness. This turned up fault scarps (offsets in the ground surface called 'slips') pointing to past earthquakes, but nothing in the recent geological past. Based on the calculations of the researchers, the fault should have slipped around 6 meters (nearly 20 feet) in that time, but hasn't. When that pressure is eventually released, it could mean an earthquake with a magnitude of more than 7.5. "The Tintina fault therefore represents an important, previously unrecognized, seismic hazard to the region," write the researchers in their published paper. "If 12,000 years or more have elapsed since the last major earthquake, the fault may be at an advanced stage of strain accumulation." This isn't the most populated part of the world, but lives are still in danger – including in nearby Dawson City, home to 1,600 people. Damage to infrastructure and ecosystems also needs to be considered. The researchers want to see further studies of the Tintina fault – and other faults like it – to better figure out the chances of it triggering an earthquake in the future. The more data experts have about historical seismic activity in the area, the better the computer models will be at predicting future events. "Further paleoseismic investigations are required to determine the recurrence intervals between past earthquakes, and whether slip rates have changed through time due to shifts in tectonic regime, or glacial isostatic adjustment," write the researchers. The research has been published in Geophysical Research Letters. Related News Surprising Study Finds Potatoes Evolved From Tomato Ancestor Giant Wave in Pacific Ocean Was The Most Extreme 'Rogue Wave' Ever Recorded Mind-Blowing Discovery: Peacocks Have Lasers In Their Tails

Associated Press
4 days ago
- Associated Press
Environmental Consulting Team Publishes Soils Guide
People should know what they're standing on and feel safe about their soil. 'This book delivers a practical yet profound understanding of soil formation, classification, and evaluation.'— Brian Oram, founder of B.F. Environmental Consultants WILKES-BARRE, PA, UNITED STATES, July 31, 2025 / / -- B.F. Environmental Consultants (BFE), an environmental consulting and education firm providing a range of services throughout the Northeast, announced today the publication of a new booklet entitled 'Guide to Soils: The Vital Life-Giving Layers Beneath Our Feet.' Authored by licensed geologists Brian Oram, founder of BFE, and Dr. Brian Redmond, the guide distills over 30 years of applied experience in geology, soil science, and environmental consulting into an engaging and accessible format. 'Whether you're studying for professional licensure, working in agriculture, engineering, or environmental science, preparing for an Envirothon, or simply curious about the world beneath us, this book delivers a practical yet profound understanding of soil formation, classification, and evaluation,' Oram said. Guide to Soils is more than a textbook—it's a field-ready companion for students, professionals, and anyone fascinated by the rich complexity of the soil that supports life on Earth. It introduces the intuitive and memorable 'POT Process"—Prepare, Observe, Translate—designed to help users assess soils in real-world applications. Rich with illustrations, field-tested insights, and plain-language explanations, Guide to Soils is an essential resource for anyone who wants to understand and work with Earth's most overlooked, life-giving system. 'This booklet was written by a soil scientist/geologist with decades of practical experience,' Redmond said. 'Its primary purpose is to provide an introduction to the practical application of soil science in real-world problems while including sections of interest, with a bit of whimsy, to more experienced professionals. Readers of all levels should be able to find it interesting and useful.' Find out more about the booklet online at To order copies, visit About B.F. Environmental Consultants, Inc. B.F. Environmental Consultants, based in Northeastern Pennsylvania and the Poconos, has been providing professional geological, soils, hydrogeological, and environmental consulting services, as well as professional and environmental training courses, and outreach since 1985. Rick Grant RGA Public Relations +1 570-497-1026 [email protected] Visit us on social media: Facebook X Legal Disclaimer: EIN Presswire provides this news content 'as is' without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the author above.