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            Emplacement of the Siberian Traps large igneous province (LIP) around 252 Ma coincided with the most profound environmental disruption of the past 500 million years. The enormous volume of the Siberian Traps, its ability to generate greenhouse gases and other volatiles, and a temporal coincidence with extinction all suggest a causal link. Patterns of marine and terrestrial extinction/recovery are consistent with environmental stresses potentially triggered by the Siberian Traps. However, the nature of causal links between the LIP and mass extinction remains enigmatic. Understanding the origins, anatomy, and forcing potential of the Siberian Traps LIP and the spatiotemporal patterns of resulting stresses represents a critical counterpart to high-resolution fossil and proxy records of Permian–Triassic environmental and biotic shifts. This review provides a summary of recent advances and key questions regarding the Siberian Traps in an effort to illuminate what combination of factors made the Siberian Traps a uniquely deadly LIP.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available May 30, 2026
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            Abstract The mainly deep-submarine Ontong Java Plateau (OJP) is the result of the largest outpouring of lava in the geologic record. Volcanic events of this magnitude can have dramatic environmental impacts due to volatile emissions. We report new S measurements in naturally glassy, olivine-hosted melt inclusions and pillow basalt glasses from the OJP. We combined these data with previous S measurements in OJP glasses to quantify S degassing in a suite of OJP glasses. Comparison with an S degassing model suggests OJP lavas that erupted at depths ~>1500 m did not degas S; OJP lavas that erupted at depths ~<1500 m degassed up to ~40% initial S, but these lavas likely made up a small fraction of OJP lavas. This result suggests that despite its large volume compared to continental large igneous provinces (LIPs), OJP lavas emitted less S, potentially contributing to its muted environmental impact. The OJP may provide a framework for the temporal evolution of S degassing at oceanic LIPs, with early eruptions at great water depths releasing limited to no S, and later eruptions at shallow water depths releasing larger, but still limited amounts of S. This framework may also have implications for continental LIP magmas, which may release significant amounts of CO2 but limited amounts of S during intrusive activity, with magmatic S emissions only becoming important during extrusive phases.more » « less
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            Volcanic eruptions impact climate, subtly and profoundly. The size of an eruption is only loosely correlated with the severity of its climate effects, which can include changes in surface temperature, ozone levels, stratospheric dynamics, precipitation, and ocean circulation. We review the processes—in magma chambers, eruption columns, and the oceans, biosphere, and atmosphere—that mediate the climate response to an eruption. A complex relationship between eruption size, style, duration, and the subsequent severity of the climate response emerges. We advocate for a new, consistent metric, the Volcano-Climate Index, to categorize climate response to eruptions independent of eruption properties and spanning the full range of volcanic activity, from brief explosive eruptions to long-lasting flood basalts. A consistent metric for categorizing the climate response to eruptions that differ in size, style, and duration is critical for establishing the relationshipbetween the severity and the frequency of such responses aiding hazard assessments, and furthering understanding of volcanic impacts on climate on timescales of years to millions of years. ▪ We review the processes driving the rocky relationship between eruption size and climate response and propose a Volcano-Climate Index. ▪ Volcanic eruptions perturb Earth's climate on a range of timescales, with key open questions regarding how processes in the magmatic system, eruption column, and atmosphere shape the climate response to volcanism. ▪ A Volcano-Climate Index will provide information on the volcano-climate severity-frequency distribution, analogous to earthquake hazards. ▪ Understanding of the frequency of specific levels of volcanic climate effects will aid hazard assessments, planning, and mitigation of societal impacts.more » « less
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            null (Ed.)Caldera footprints and erupted magma volumes provide a unique constraint on vertical dimensions of upper crustal magma reservoirs that feed explosive silicic eruptions. Here we define a Vertical Separation (VS) ratio in which we compare the geometric vertical extent with the range of depths indicated petrologically by melt inclusion water and CO2 saturation pressures for fifteen caldera-forming eruptions spanning ∼10^0 km3 to ∼10^3 km3 in volume. We supplement melt inclusion saturation pressures with rhyolite-MELTS barometry and plagioclase-melt hygrometry to generate a petrologic image of magma reservoir architecture. We find that pre-eruptive upper crustal magma reservoirs range from contiguous bodies (where petrologic and geometric estimates match closely) to vertically dispersed structures. Vertically dispersed pre-eruptive reservoirs are more common among intermediate-volume eruptions than among the smallest and largest caldera-forming eruptions. We infer that the architecture of magma reservoirs tracks the thermomechanical evolution of large volcanic systems.more » « less
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            The Toba eruption ∼74,000 y ago was the largest volcanic eruption since the start of the Pleistocene and represents an important test case for understanding the effects of large explosive eruptions on climate and ecosystems. However, the magnitude and repercussions of climatic changes driven by the eruption are strongly debated. High-resolution paleoclimate and archaeological records from Africa find little evidence for the disruption of climate or human activity in the wake of the eruption in contrast with a controversial link with a bottleneck in human evolution and climate model simulations predicting strong volcanic cooling for up to a decade after a Toba-scale eruption. Here, we use a large ensemble of high-resolution Community Earth System Model (CESM1.3) simulations to reconcile climate model predictions with paleoclimate records, accounting for uncertainties in the magnitude of Toba sulfur emissions with high and low emission scenarios. We find a near-zero probability of annual mean surface temperature anomalies exceeding 4 °C in most of Africa in contrast with near 100% probabilities of cooling this severe in Asia and North America for the high sulfur emission case. The likelihood of strong decreases in precipitation is low in most of Africa. Therefore, even Toba sulfur release at the upper range of plausible estimates remains consistent with the muted response in Africa indicated by paleoclimate proxies. Our results provide a probabilistic view of the uneven patterns of volcanic climate disruption during a crucial interval in human evolution, with implications for understanding the range of environmental impacts from past and future supereruptions.more » « less
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            A 2 to 4 °C warming episode, known as the Latest Maastrichtian warming event (LMWE), preceded the Cretaceous–Paleogene boundary (KPB) mass extinction at 66.05 ± 0.08 Ma and has been linked with the onset of voluminous Deccan Traps volcanism. Here, we use direct measurements of melt-inclusion CO2concentrations and trace-element proxies for CO2to test the hypothesis that early Deccan magmatism triggered this warming interval. We report CO2concentrations from NanoSIMS and Raman spectroscopic analyses of melt-inclusion glass and vapor bubbles hosted in magnesian olivines from pre-KPB Deccan primitive basalts. Reconstructed melt-inclusion CO2concentrations range up to 0.23 to 1.2 wt% CO2for lavas from the Saurashtra Peninsula and the Thakurvadi Formation in the Western Ghats region. Trace-element proxies for CO2concentration (Ba and Nb) yield estimates of initial melt concentrations of 0.4 to 1.3 wt% CO2prior to degassing. Our data imply carbon saturation and degassing of Deccan magmas initiated at high pressures near the Moho or in the lower crust. Furthermore, we find that the earliest Deccan magmas were more CO2rich, which we hypothesize facilitated more efficient flushing and outgassing from intrusive magmas. Based on carbon cycle modeling and estimates of preserved lava volumes for pre-KPB lavas, we find that volcanic CO2outgassing alone remains insufficient to account for the magnitude of the observed latest Maastrichtian warming. However, accounting for intrusive outgassing can reconcile early carbon-rich Deccan Traps outgassing with observed changes in climate and atmospheric pCO2.more » « less
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