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Article
Nature 433, 123-127 (13 January 2005) | doi:10.1038/nature03176; Received 24 May 2004; Accepted 3 November 2004
There is a Brief Communications Arising (21 July 2005) associated with this document.
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Head-Preclinical
- Syngene International
- Bangalore, Karnataka 560099 India
Tier II Canada Research Chair in Cellular Science and Human Health
- Concordia University
- Montreal, Quebec Canada
Extreme winds and waves in the aftermath of a Neoproterozoic glaciation
Philip A. Allen1 & Paul F. Hoffman2
- Department of Earth Sciences, ETH-Zürich, Sonneggstrasse 5, CH-8092 Zürich, Switzerland
- Department of Earth & Planetary Sciences, Harvard University, 20 Oxford Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-2902, USA
Correspondence to: Philip A. Allen1 Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to P.A.A. (Email: philip.allen@erdw.ethz.ch).
Abstract
The most severe excursions in the Earth's climatic history are thought to be associated with Proterozoic glaciations. According to the 'Snowball Earth' hypothesis, the Marinoan glaciation, which ended about 635 million years ago, involved global or nearly global ice cover. At the termination of this glacial period, rapid melting of continental ice sheets must have caused a large rise in sea level. Here we show that sediments deposited during this sea level rise contain remarkable structures that we interpret as giant wave ripples. These structures occur at homologous stratigraphic levels in Australia, Brazil, Canada, Namibia and Svalbard. Our hydrodynamic analysis of these structures suggests maximum wave periods of 21 to 30 seconds, significantly longer than those typical for today's oceans. The reconstructed wave conditions could only have been generated under sustained high wind velocities exceeding 20 metres per second in fetch-unlimited ocean basins. We propose that these extraordinary wind and wave conditions were characteristic of the climatic transit, and provide observational targets for atmospheric circulation models.
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