November 5, 2024

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Remote Scottish islands may solve ice age mystery

Remote Scottish islands may solve ice age mystery

Garvalash team at University College LondonUniversity College London

A group of remote Scottish islands may help solve one of our planet's greatest mysteries, scientists say.

Researchers have discovered that the Garvelash Islands off the west coast of Scotland are the best record of Earth entering its largest ever ice age about 720 million years ago.

The Great Freeze, which covered almost the entire globe in two stages for 80 million years, is known as the “Snowball Earth”, after which the first animal life arose.

Evidence of glaciation hidden in rocks has been wiped out everywhere—except on the Garvelash Islands. Researchers hope the islands will tell us why Earth was frozen in a deep, icy state for so long and why complex life was necessary.

SPL image of Snowball EarthEnglish:SPL

The Earth was almost completely covered in ice during the longest and most intense ice age in the planet's history.

Rock layers can be thought of as pages in a history book – each layer contains details of the state of the Earth in the distant past.

But it was thought that the critical period before Snowball Earth was missing because the rock layers were eroded by the Great Freeze.

Now a new study by researchers at University College London has revealed that the Garvelash region somehow survived the catastrophe. It may be the only place on Earth that contains a detailed record of how the Earth entered one of the most catastrophic periods in its history – as well as what happened when the first animal life appeared as the Ice Ball melted hundreds of millions of years ago.

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At that time Scotland was in a very different place because the continents had moved over time. It was south of the equator and had a tropical climate, until it and the rest of the planet were covered by ice.

A diagram showing the location of Scotland 720 million years ago.

“We have captured the moment when the Ice Age entered Scotland, which is missing from all other parts of the world,” Professor Graham Shields of University College London, who led the research, told BBC News.

“The critical millions of years are lost elsewhere due to glacial erosion – but they are all present in the rock layers in the Garvelash area.”

The islands in Scotland's Inner Hebrides are uninhabited, except for a team of scientists working out of a secluded building on the main island, although there are ruins of a Celtic monastery dating back to the 6th century.

The discovery was made by PhD student Elias Rogin, whose findings were published in the Journal of the Geological Society of London. He is the first to date rock layers and identify them as belonging to a critical period that is absent from all other rock formations around the world.

His discovery puts the Garvilash family on a list of the biggest prizes in science: a golden nail hammered into sites identified as the best record of geological moments that changed the planet — though the nail is not actually made of gold to keep thieves away.

Elias Rogin of University College LondonUniversity College London

This was discovered by Elias Rogin, who here pretends to hammer in a coveted golden nail. Now he is content with a carrot.