
How the biggest flood in the history of the Earth created the Mediterranean
Six million years ago, the Mediterranean Sea wasn't nearly as picturesque as it is today. It was barely even a sea; tectonic activity had raised a mountain range in the Strait of Gibraltar, cutting off the Mediterranean from the Atlantic. Without a constant inflow of water the sea evaporated under the baking sun, and all that remained were a few scattered, briny lakes surrounded by mile after mile of salt and gypsum. Today, scientists call this the Messinian Salinity Crisis: in the dying days of the Miocene epoch, most of the Mediterranean died.
But if, on a certain day about 5.3 million years ago, you happened to go for a stroll along that mountain range, you might have discovered something odd: a trickle of water, making its way down one of the mountains from the Atlantic ocean beyond it. The mountains had been slowly sinking until their summits were level with the ocean's surface; one day, the mountains sank just enough for some of the water to spill over their edges.
Once they did, the water carved an unstoppable path downhill. The trickle turned into a stream, which widened into a river, and soon the ocean was pouring into the desiccated Mediterranean basin with the force of a thousand Amazon Rivers, suddenly ending the 600,000-year-long dry spell.
The water moved so quickly — 32 meters per second, or about 72 miles per hour, by the time it hit the coast of modern-day Sicily — that it dragged the air behind it, creating tropical storm-force winds as it moved. If you managed to somehow see through all the muddy sediment stirred up by the flood waters, you might have found a few surprised fish in the depths, stunned or struck dead outright by the force of the rapids that carried them in from the Atlantic. As the water refilled the Mediterranean, it ushered in a new geological era: the Zanclean.
'I don't think any human has ever seen anything like this,' says Aaron Micallef, a National Geographic Explorer and marine geoscientist at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute who studies this event, called the Zanclean megaflood. Micallef and his colleagues have spent years putting together the puzzle pieces of what the flood looked like, and this story is largely built on their research, which melds geologic evidence with computer modeling. While evidence for the flood is still accumulating, this is the scientist's best picture yet of what's likely the largest flood in the history of the Earth.
Micallef and his colleagues found that the Mediterranean, which had been obliterated once when the sea dried up, was transformed completely again by the megaflood.
The fossil record is difficult to read in much detail, but scientists think that before the sea dried up it was filled with all kinds of creatures, from ancient sharks and pinnipeds to fish and a rainbow of coral. Only eighty-six of the 780 or so species from the sea that existed before the salinity crisis have survived into the modern-day Mediterranean, and the fact that they lived through the flood is a minor miracle. Those creatures, a collection of mollusks, plankton, and one standout sea slug, most likely survived by finding refuge in the few patches of water that remained after the sea dried up.
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As the water poured in, the western Mediterranean began refilling at a tremendous rate; Micallef estimates the water flowed at a rate of somewhere between 68 and 100 million cubic meters per second, filling the sea by as much as ten meters, or nearly 33 feet, each day. The weight of the rising waters pressed down on the Earth's crust, making it slide across the molten mantle underneath. This, says Daniel Garcia-Castellanos, a Geophysicist at CSIC Barcelona and a pioneer on research into the Zanclean megaflood, would have triggered earthquakes that rippled through the region. For the goat-antelope creature Myotragus, which had walked across the dry sea to make its home on modern-day Mallorca and Menorca, the earthquakes, water, and wind combined must have sounded like the roar of a monstrous predator — surely, this was the end of the world as they knew it.
Eventually, the rising waters streamed over the lip of Sicily, and as the current moved east it ate away at the land, leaving behind hundreds of long ridges as if a giant hand had clawed through the dirt. A little bit further east, the water hit another wall that we now call the Malta Escarpment. This barrier divided the Mediterranean into west and east, turning the western mediterranean into a giant bowl: for the water to make its way east, it first had to fill the western half of the sea.
Once the western half of the sea filled up enough for the water to make its way over the top of the wall, it tipped over into the east and down a cliff about 1.5 kilometers deep, creating the largest waterfall in the history of our planet; imagine the Niagara Falls, but 30 times taller. The crash of the water triggered more earthquakes, and the flood dumped mounds of sediment at the bottom of the sea as it rushed into the east.
As the water rose in the east to meet the waters of the western Mediterranean, the earth stopped shaking. The wind died down. The water started clearing as it settled, sediment falling to the sea floor. Somewhere between two and sixteen years after the first waters broke through the Strait of Gibraltar — not even the blink of an eye in geological time — the Mediterranean leveled off with the Atlantic.
From the surface, all signs of upheaval disappeared. The Atlantic flowed lazily into the newly reformed Mediterranean, which was now free of walls or waterfalls. This sea, with its comparatively mild waters, looked much as it would millions of years later, when ancient Greece and Rome established themselves on its edges, When the Greek poet Homer wrote of the sea monsters Scylla and Charybdis living off the coast of Sicily, he had no way of knowing that Charybdis, who often takes the form of a whirlpool pulling unfortunate sailors to their death in the depths, had already been upstaged by the sea's own history.
It would take surprisingly long for any new sea creatures, monstrous or otherwise, to make a home in the Mediterranean.
'In geological terms, we should have been seeing marine fauna immediately, but that's not what is happening,' Konstantina Agiadi, a geologist at the University of Vienna who co-authored a paper on the impact of the salinity crisis and flood on marine biodiversity. The water in the immediate aftermath of the flooding would have made a poor home, devoid of nutrients and far too salty for most creatures to live in; the ones that existed in the sea before the flood struggled by for a few millennia before the water became hospitable enough for any potential newcomers, and even today the Mediterranean is considerably saltier than the Atlantic. 'It took a lot of time for the situation to settle enough for organisms that were coming from the Atlantic to actually establish healthy populations and grow,' Agiadi said.Today, the sea is a biodiversity hotspot, filled with all varieties of sea creatures.
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Even though the flood happened millions of years ago, Micallef says, it holds important clues about the future of our planet. Climate change is making flooding from melting glaciers more common, and understanding the dynamics of the Zanclean megaflood — even though it was much larger than anything we have seen from glaciers so far — can help us model what future flooding will look like, mapping both the flow of water and its effect on the landscape around it.
And, says Agiadi, there's another important lesson too: The world transformed when the Messinian Salinity Crisis and Zanclean megaflood happened, and there was no going back. The creatures that live in the Mediterranean now, wonderful as they may be, are nothing like what lived there before it dried up. That's true of climate change too.
'The flood is kind of like a natural experiment,' Agiadi says. 'The Mediterranean, after the flooding, eventually became a marine basin that is a biodiversity hotspot today. But it never became, even after millions of years, what it was before. So it's kind of a natural test of if we can fix things. If you try to bring back a species without fixing the underlying problems, it will never be okay. But it might be something different.'
The nonprofit National Geographic Society, committed to illuminating and protecting the wonder of our world, funded Explorer Aaron Micallef's work. Learn more about the Society's support of Explorers.
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Yahoo
21-05-2025
- Yahoo
Deep sea mining threatens the unknown
When the submarine plunged to about 10,000 meters below sea level, somewhere off the coast of Hawaii, ecologist Jeff Drazen asked the pilots to cut the strobe lights that had been guiding them through the pitch-black waters. For a moment, they continued falling to the sea floor in complete darkness. Then, the creatures of the deep sea began dazzling the crew with a striking display of bioluminescent lights, emitting signals to one another as they encountered this new strange object in their habitat. 'It's like you are falling through the stars,' Drazen told Salon in a phone interview. 'There are twinkling lights everywhere.' Thousands of feet below sea level, the creatures that live in the deep sea survive without direct sunlight, plants or the warmth of the sun. Much of the deep ocean is vacant, with extremely cold, lightless regions making it difficult for life as we know it to survive. Yet spectacular animals reside there, including the vampire squid, which has the largest eyes proportional to its body of any animal (though this cephalopod is neither a vampire or a squid); a pearly white octopus nicknamed 'Casper'; and, of course, the toothy Angler fish that became an internet sensation when one rose to the surface earlier this year. Last month, President Donald Trump issued an executive order promoting deep sea mining, which is currently prohibited under international law. And on Tuesday, the Department of the Interior announced it is initiating the process to evaluate a potential mineral lease sale in the waters offshore American Samoa. As industry eyes nodules found on the ocean floor as a potential way to extract nickel, copper and cobalt for making things like electric car batteries, scientists warn that deep sea mining is likely to be detrimental to life that exists there. 'We don't know that much about the deep sea because we have explored so little,' said Jim Barry, a seafloor ecologist at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute, 'We should make sure we know what is there before we do much to destroy things.' The deep sea begins at about 200 meters below sea level, where light starts to diminish in a region called the twilight zone. The deepest part of the ocean lies in the Mariana Trench in the western Pacific Ocean, where the ocean floor lies almost 11,000 feet below sea level — a height that is taller than Mount Everest. The ocean covers 71% of the Earth's surface, so classifying the deep sea as a single habitat is like classifying all land as one habitat. Just as on land there are deserts, grasslands, rainforests and the arctic, so too in the deep sea there are numerous different ecosystems that differ by geography, temperature and the animals that live there. Earlier this month, scientists witnessed the first volcanic eruption underwater for the first time.'Even if you're just looking at forests in the U.S., you wouldn't think that the forest on the East Coast is going to look the same as the forest on the West Coast,' Drazen said. 'The same is true on the sea floor, and we actually have data that shows this: The communities that you find in the east on nodules are not the same as the communities you find in the west on nodules.' One study published in Science earlier this month found that with 44,000 deep-sea dives, just 0.001% of the deep seafloor has been visually observed — which is roughly the size of Yosemite National Park. The rest is a black box. The study authors also note 'Ninety-seven percent of all dives we compiled have been conducted by just five countries: the United States, Japan, New Zealand, France, and Germany. 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Many species in the deep sea have developed adaptations like bioluminescence or large eyes that help them navigate the dark waters. Others living in regions called oxygen-minimum zones — also known as 'dead zones' or 'shadow zones' — have developed elaborate breathing structures that look like lungs outside of their bodies in order to maximize the surface area they use to absorb oxygen, said Lisa Levin, an oceanographer at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography. On the seafloor, you can find canyons, volcanoes and vast abyssal planes. In some regions called chemosynthetic ecosystems, creatures produce food using the energy from chemical reactions rather than sunlight. 'Deep water isn't uniform, it's kind of layered, and there are different water masses,' Levin told Salon in a video call. 'It's really a whole mosaic of ecosystems and habitats.' As remote as it may seem, the deep sea is just one degree of separation from anyone who eats seafood, Drazen said. 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'When the productivity of the surface water changes, that affects the amount of detritus, or dead material, that sinks to the deep sea floor that is the food supply for those organisms,' Drazen said. 'That is reducing the food supply to the deep sea.' Many of the minerals involved in proposed deep sea mining operations are located on black, potato-shaped nodules that lie on the seafloor. Yet a community of animals lives on the nodules themselves, and they would be eradicated if they are mined, said Lauren Mullineaux, a senior scientist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. Additionally, mining operations scrape up the seafloor, producing sediment plumes that can disrupt an area up to hundreds of kilometers away from the operating site, Mullineaux said. Even a fine dusting of this sediment might change the habitat enough to kill some of those species, she explained. 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Yahoo
15-05-2025
- Yahoo
Newly discovered frog species from 55 million years ago challenges evolutionary tree
Australian tree frogs today make up over one third of all known frog species on the continent. Among this group, iconic species such as the green tree frog (Litoria caerulea) and the green and golden bell frog (Litoria aurea), are both beloved for their vivid colours and distinctive calls. In the Early Eocene epoch, 55 million years ago, Australia's tree frogs were hopping across the Australian continent from one billabong to the next through a forested corridor that also extended back across Antarctica to South America. These were the last remnants of ancient supercontinent Gondwana. In new research published today in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, we identify Australia's earliest known species of tree frog – one that once hopped and croaked around an ancient lake near the town of Murgon in south-eastern Queensland. 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Based on some molecular data, it has been estimated that the two groups separated from this common ancestor as recent as 32.9 million years ago. Our new study was based on frog fossils from a deposit near the town of Murgon, located on the traditional lands of the Waka Waka people of south-eastern Queensland. These fossils accumulated some 55 million years ago. This was between the time when a colossal meteorite took out the non-flying dinosaurs and the time when Australia broke free from the rest of Gondwana to become an isolated continent. As well as ancient frog fossils, the Early Eocene freshwater clay deposit also contains fossils of ancient bats, marsupials, snakes, non-marine birds and potentially the world's oldest songbirds. We used CT scans of frogs preserved in ethanol from Australian museum collections to compare the three-dimensional shape of the fossil bones with those of living species. This method is called three-dimensional geometric morphometrics. It has only been used on fossil frogs once before. Using these new methods, we can unravel the relationships of these fossils to all other groups of frogs – both living and extinct. From its diagnostic ilium (one of three paired pelvic bones), we identified a new species of Litoria from the family Pelodryadidae. We named this species Litoria tylerantiqua in honour of the late Michael Tyler, a renowned Australian herpetologist globally celebrated for his research on frogs and toads. Litoria tylerantiqua joins the only other Murgon frog discovered so far, the ground-dwelling Platyplectrum casca, as the oldest frogs known from Australia. Both species have living relatives in Australia and New Guinea. This demonstrates the remarkable resilience over time of some of Australia's most fragile creatures. Our new research provides crucial new understanding that helps to calibrate molecular clock studies. This is a method scientists use to estimate when different species split from a common ancestor based on the calculated rate of genetic change over time. Our research indicates the separation of Australian tree frogs and South American tree frogs is at minimum 55 million years ago. This pushes back the estimated molecular separation time for these groups by 22 million years. Unravelling the deep-time changes in the diversity and evolution of the ancestors of today's living animals can provide important new insights into the way these groups have responded in the past to previous challenges. These challenges include former natural cycles of climate change. The more we know about the fossil record, the more likely we will better anticipate future responses to similar challenges, including human-induced climate change. This is especially important for critically endangered species such as the Southern Corroboree Frog and Baw Baw Frog. Now restricted to alpine habitats in New South Wales and Victoria, they are at serious risk of extinction due to global warming. This article is republished from The Conversation. It was written by: Roy M. Farman, UNSW Sydney and Mike Archer, UNSW Sydney Read more: Two lizard-like creatures crossed tracks 355 million years ago. Today, their footprints yield a major discovery Improving human beings to make them perform better: Why is transhumanism so harmful? Antarctica has a huge, completely hidden mountain range. New data reveals its birth over 500 million years ago Roy M. Farman received funding from the Research Training Program through the University of New South Wales. Mike Archer has received funding from the Australian Research Council, the Australian Geographic Society, the National Geographic Society, the Riversleigh Society Inc and private funding from Phil Creaser (the CREATE Fund in UNSW), K. and M. Pettit, D. and A. Jeanes and other benefactors.


New York Post
09-05-2025
- New York Post
Over 99% of the deep ocean seafloor remains a mystery, study finds
Explorers know that the Earth's oceans are vast, covering about 71% of the surface of the globe. According to a new study, just 0.001% of the deep seafloor has been visually observed. The deep ocean seafloor is defined as depths of 200 meters or more below Earth's surface, where oxygen levels are low and sunlight is virtually nonexistent. The study, published in Science Advances, equates the area seen by human eyes to being even smaller than the state of Rhode Island. 'As we face accelerated threats to the deep ocean—from climate change to potential mining and resource exploitation—this limited exploration of such a vast region becomes a critical problem for both science and policy,' Katy Croff Bell, Ph.D., president of Ocean Discovery League, National Geographic Explorer and lead author of the study, said in a statement. Researchers said they arrived at the surprising figure based on a review of data from approximately 44,000 deep-sea dives conducted since 1958. 7 According to a new study, just 0.001% of the deep seafloor has been visually observed. Ocean Discovery League 7 The study, published in Science Advances, equates the area seen by human eyes to being even smaller than the state of Rhode Island. Ocean Discovery League While scientists note that not all dive records are publicly accessible, even if their estimates were off by a factor of ten, it would still mean that less than one-hundredth of 1% of the deep ocean floor has ever been visually documented. Due to the costs and the technology needed to explore at vast depths, only a few countries are equipped to scan the ocean floor. These countries include the United States, Japan, New Zealand, France, and Germany. 7 Due to the costs and the technology needed to explore at vast depths, only a few countries are equipped to scan the ocean floor. NOAA Ocean Exploration What's it like down there? In the deepest trenches, it is void of life, according to scientists. Organisms such as sea spiders and some crustaceans can be found among hydrothermal vents. Water pressure is so immense that animals unsuited to the punishing environment would be killed. Because of the lack of sunlight, organisms must rely on senses other than sight to get around. 7 In the deepest trenches, it is void of life, according to scientists. NOAA Ocean Exploration 7 Because of the lack of sunlight, organisms must rely on senses other than sight to get around. NOAA Ocean Exploration The limited knowledge of the oceans means entire ecosystems may remain undiscovered, and countless species are not well understood. 'There is so much of our ocean that remains a mystery,' said Ian Miller, Ph.D., chief science and innovation officer at the National Geographic Society. 'Deep-sea exploration led by scientists and local communities is crucial to better understanding the planet's largest ecosystem. Dr. Bell's goals to equip global coastal communities with cutting-edge research and technology will ensure a more representative analysis of the deep sea. If we have a better understanding of our ocean, we are better able to conserve and protect it.' 7 Previous studies have suggested that potentially millions of plants and animals remain undiscovered simply due to the sheer size and inaccessibility of the oceans. NOAA Ocean Exploration 7 The limited knowledge of the oceans means entire ecosystems may remain undiscovered, and countless species are not well understood. NOAA Ocean Exploration Previous studies have suggested that potentially millions of plants and animals remain undiscovered simply due to the sheer size and inaccessibility of the oceans. The study's authors argue that as technology advances and becomes more cost-effective, expanding efforts to explore the vast ecosystem become increasingly feasible and necessary. By investing in emerging tools and strategies, researchers believe the world can gain a much deeper understanding of Earth's most critical and least known ecosystem.