Climatic Consequences of Very High Carbon Dioxide Levels in the Earth's Early Atmosphere
Open Access
- 12 December 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 234 (4782), 1383-1385
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.11539665
Abstract
The possible consequences of very high carbon dioxide concentrations in the earth's early atmosphere have been investigated with a radiative-convective climate model. The early atmosphere would apparently have been stable against the onset of a runaway greenhouse (that is, the complete evaporation of the oceans) for carbon dioxide pressures up to at least 100 bars. A 10- to 20-bar carbon dioxide atmosphere, such as may have existed during the first several hundred million years of the earth's history, would have had a surface temperature of approximately 85 degrees to 110 degrees C. The early stratosphere should have been dry, thereby precluding the possibility of an oxygenic prebiotic atmosphere caused by photodissociation of water vapor followed by escape of hydrogen to space. Earth's present atmosphere also appears to be stable against a carbon dioxide-induced runaway greenhouse.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Carbon dioxide on the early earthOrigins of Life and Evolution of Biospheres, 1985
- Response of Earth's atmosphere to increases in solar flux and implications for loss of water from VenusIcarus, 1984
- The Role of Convective Model Choice in Calculating the Climate Impact of Doubling CO2Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 1982
- Prebiotic atmospheric oxygen levelsNature, 1981
- Simple strategies for inclusion of Voigt effects in infrared cooling rate calculationsApplied Optics, 1979
- The Escape of Light Gases from Planetary AtmospheresJournal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 1973
- Line widths and intensities in H2O-CO2 mixtures II. high-resolution measurements on the v2-fundamental of water vaporJournal of Quantitative Spectroscopy and Radiative Transfer, 1971
- Positions, Intensities, and Widths of Water-Vapor Lines between 475 and 692 cm^−1*Journal of the Optical Society of America, 1969
- Cesar BirotteauThe Modern Language Review, 1966
- Rotation-Vibration Spectra of Diatomic and Simple Polyatomic Molecules with Long Absorbing PathsXI The Spectrum of Carbon Dioxide (Co_2) below 125μ*Journal of the Optical Society of America, 1953