The 2018 Kilauea Eruption along the East Rift Zone Is Becoming
Voluminous Enough to Cause Substantial Global Warming Just Like Other
Extensive, Effusive, Sub-aerial, Basaltic Lava Flows Found Worldwide
Abstract
Throughout Earth history, extensive, sub-aerial, basaltic lava flows
associated with continental rifting and hot spots have been
contemporaneous with major global warming—the more extensive the
flows, the longer the period of eruption, and the greater the warming of
air and oceans. Around 251 Ma, basalts covered an area in Siberia of 5
million km2 probably within 670,000 years, causing equatorial oceans to
become highly acidic with temperatures >40°C. Approximately
96% of all marine species and 70% of all terrestrial vertebrate
species went extinct in an environmental crisis mapped globally as the
end of the Paleozoic. The Deccan basalts covered an area of 0.5 million
km2 around 66 Ma causing warming and extinctions that formed the end of
the Mesozoic. Around 56 Ma, rifting of Norway from Greenland extruded as
much basalt as 3000 km3 per km of rift per million years, forming the
Paleocene Eocene Thermal Maximum. Hundreds of smaller basalt eruptions
punctuate the geologic time scale ending geologic eras, periods, epochs,
and even ages. In historic time, the Great Þjórsá Lava, covering 970 km2
of Iceland, led to major warming around 8600 BP. The King’s Bowl and
Wapi lava fields covered 700 km2 of the Snake River Plain in southern
Idaho around 2250 BP during the Roman Warm Period. The basaltic volcano
Eldgjá covered 800 km2 of Iceland around 939 AD, associated with the
Medieval Warm Period. The much smaller volcano Bárðarbunga erupted 85
km2 of basalt in 6 months starting in 2014, the largest basalt flow
since 1783, contemporaneous with sudden warming in the northern
hemisphere of 0.47oC from 2014 to 2016. The rate of flood-basalt areal
coverage was 0.5 km2 per day. The Kona eruption has been extruding
basalts covering 0.6 to 0.4 km2 per day from May 3 through July 27. If
this eruption continues for 6 months, it could affect climate as much as
Bárðarbunga. Warming appears caused by ozone depletion, allowing more
UV-B than usual to reach Earth. UV-B radiation is hot enough to burn
skin and is 48 times hotter than infrared radiation absorbed strongly by
CO2. Basaltic eruptions emit especially high volumes of chlorine and
bromine, which are observed to cause ozone depletion. The exact chemical
path is not yet well understood. Heat waves during the summer of 2018
are associated with a “sharply kinked” jet stream often thought caused
by ozone depletion.