Global Climate
Change in the Paleozoic (Ordovician, and Carboniferous-Permian): Why it Matters
to the Oil Industry Now, and in the Future
Pope, Michael Carl1 (1) Washington State University, Pullman, WA
The state of the global climate has
fluctuated, sometimes rapidly, between greenhouse and icehouse conditions since
at least 2 Ga. During the Paleozoic
there were three main periods of widespread continental glaciation:
Late Ordovician, Late Devonian, and Carboniferous-Permian. These periods are
characterized by low atmospheric pCO2 content and large-scale (>20 m)
high-frequency (20-400 k.y.) eustatic
sea level oscillations which partition carbonate reservoir rocks differently
than they are partitioned during greenhouse periods. Late Ordovician climate
change produced a long-term transitional climate phase (454 Ma-442 Ma) that is
characterized in North America by carbonate parasequences
indicating ~20 m sea level fluctuations, overlain by long-term sequences (1-3
Ma duration) with little or no evidence for high-frequency parasequences.
The acme of continental glaciation centered on Africa was very short-lived
(possibly < 1 Ma) and formed a widespread unconformity on many other
continents. The Carboniferous-Permian glaciation
occurred in pulses with larger continental icesheets
during the late Mississippian-early Pennsylvanian, the middle Pennsylvanian and
the late Pennsylvanian-Early Permian. The waxing and waning of these glaciers
produced both cyclothems and larger-scale asymmetric
sequences with fewer parasequences. The record of
these glacial events is well-recorded in rocks, and with greater and greater
emphasis on high-resolution stratigraphic studies we
are beginning to gain more insight into the mode and tempo of these climate
shifts. If atmospheric CO2 continues to increase at its present rate the only
true analogs we may soon have to understand future rapid climate fluctuations
will have to come from studies of these ancient rocks.