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The history of CO2
Authors:Egon T Degens
Abstract:Upon arrival on Earth, the reduced carbon pool split into a series of compartments: core, mantle, crust, hydrosphere, atmosphere, biosphere.This distribution pattern is caused by the ability of carbon to adjust structurally to a wide range of pressure and temperature, and to form simple and complex molecules with oxygen, hydrogen and nitrogen. Transformation also involved oxidation of carbon to CO2 which is mediated at depth by minerals, such as magnetite, and by water vapor above critical temperature. Guided by mineral-organic interactions, simple carbon compounds evolved in near surface environments towards physiologically interesting biochemicals. Life, as an autocatalytic system, is considered an outgrowth of such a development.This article discusses environmental parameters that control the CO2 system, past and present. Mantle and crustal evolution is the dynamo recharging the CO2 in sea and air; the present rate of CO2 release from the magma is 0.05 × 1015 g C per year. Due to the enormous buffer capacity of the chemical system ocean, such rates are too small to seriously effect the level of CO2 in our atmosphere. In the light of geological field data and stable isotope work, it is concluded that the CO2 content in the atmosphere has remained fairly uniform since early Precambrian time; CO2 should thus have had little impact on paleoclimate. In contrast, the massive discharge of man-made CO2 into our atmosphere may have serious consequences for climate, environment and society in the years to come.
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