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© Martin ShieldsEarth Cooler
The birth of the US Appalachian mountain chain may have been behind a major ice age and a mass extinction.

The extinction event at the end of the Ordovician 450 million years ago was the second largest Earth has ever seen. It has long been believed that an ice age caused it, but no one knew what triggered the freeze.

Seth Young of Indiana University in Bloomington, and colleagues, believe two factors conspired to create the deep freeze. First, layers of lava show that climate-warming volcanic activity slowed down at this time. The second factor was an increase in the weathering of the Appalachian rocks between 462 and 454 million years ago, which is indicated by changes in strontium isotope ratios in Ordovician oceanic rocks (Geology, DOI: 10.1130/g30152a.1).

The team says these factors combined to cause a sudden drop in atmospheric carbon dioxide, which would have cooled the planet sufficiently to cause the ice age.

For most species the temperature change was too sudden for them to adapt, leading to mass extinctions.