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		 Carbon 
		emissions highest in 66 million years, since dinosaur age 
		
		 
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		[March 22, 2016] 
		By Alister Doyle 
		  
		 OSLO (Reuters) - The rate of carbon 
		emissions is higher than at any time in fossil records stretching back 
		66 million years to the age of the dinosaurs, according to a study on 
		Monday that sounds an alarm about risks to nature from man-made global 
		warming. 
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			 Scientists wrote that the pace of emissions even eclipses the 
			onset of the biggest-known natural surge in fossil records, 56 
			million years ago, that was perhaps driven by a release of frozen 
			stores of greenhouse gases beneath the seabed. 
			 
			That ancient release, which drove temperatures up by an estimated 5 
			degrees Celsius (9 Fahrenheit) and damaged marine life by making the 
			oceans acidic, is often seen as a parallel to the risks from the 
			current build-up of carbon in the atmosphere from burning fossil 
			fuels. 
			 
			"Given currently available records, the present anthropogenic carbon 
			release rate is unprecedented during the past 66 million years," the 
			scientists wrote in the journal Nature Geoscience. 
			
			  The dinosaurs went extinct about 66 million years ago, perhaps after 
			a giant asteroid struck the Earth. 
			 
			Lead author Richard Zeebe of the University of Hawaii said 
			geological records were vague and "it's not well known if/how much 
			carbon was released" in that cataclysm. 
			 
			Current carbon emissions, mainly from burning fossil fuels, are 
			about 10 billion tonnes a year, against 1.1 billion a year spread 
			over 4,000 years at the onset of the fast warming 56 million years 
			ago, the study found. 
			 
			The scientists examined the chemical makeup of fossils of tiny 
			marine organisms in the seabed off the New Jersey in the United 
			States to gauge that ancient warming, known as the 
			Paleoeocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM). U.N. studies project 
			that temperatures could rise by up to 4.8C this century, causing 
			floods, droughts and more powerful storms, if emissions rise 
			unchecked. Carbon dioxide forms a weak acid in seawater, threatening 
			the ability of creatures such as lobsters or oysters to build 
			protective shells. 
			 
			
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			"Our results suggest that future ocean acidification and possible 
			effects on marine calcifying organisms will be more severe than 
			during the PETM," Zeebe said. 
			 
			"Future ecosystem disruptions are likely to exceed the relatively 
			limited extinctions observed at the PETM," he said. During the PETM, 
			fish and other creatures may have had longer time to adapt to 
			warming waters through evolution. 
			 
			Peter Stassen, of the University of Leuven who was not involved in 
			the study, said the study was a step to unravel what happened in the 
			PETM. 
			 
			The PETM "is a crucial part of our understanding of how the climate 
			system can react to carbon dioxide increases," he told Reuters. 
			 
			(Reporting by Alister Doyle; Editing by Catherine Evans) 
			
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