Massive and prolonged deep carbon emissions associated with continental rifting

Carbon from Earth's interior is thought to be released to the atmosphere mostly via degassing of CO2 from active volcanoes. CO2 can also escape along faults away from active volcanic centres, but such tectonic degassing is poorly constrained. Here we use measurements of diffuse soil CO2 , combi...

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Published inNature geoscience Vol. 9; no. 2; pp. 145 - 149
Main Authors Lee, Hyunwoo, Muirhead, James D., Fischer, Tobias P., Ebinger, Cynthia J., Kattenhorn, Simon A., Sharp, Zachary D., Kianji, Gladys
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Nature Publishing Group 01.02.2016
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Summary:Carbon from Earth's interior is thought to be released to the atmosphere mostly via degassing of CO2 from active volcanoes. CO2 can also escape along faults away from active volcanic centres, but such tectonic degassing is poorly constrained. Here we use measurements of diffuse soil CO2 , combined with carbon isotopic analyses to quantify the flux of CO2 through fault systems away from active volcanoes in the East African Rift system. We find that about 4 Mt yr-1 of mantle-derived CO2 is released in the Magadi-Natron Basin, at the border between Kenya and Tanzania. Seismicity at depths of 15-30 km implies that extensional faults in this region may penetrate the lower crust. We therefore suggest that CO2 is transferred from upper-mantle or lower-crustal magma bodies along these deep faults. Extrapolation of our measurements to the entire Eastern rift of the rift system implies a CO2 flux on the order of tens of megatonnes per year, comparable to emissions from the entire mid-ocean ridge system of 53-97 Mt yr-1 . We conclude that widespread continental rifting and super-continent breakup could produce massive, long-term CO2 emissions and contribute to prolonged greenhouse conditions like those of the Cretaceous.
ISSN:1752-0894
1752-0908
DOI:10.1038/ngeo2622