s formed by late Paleozoic glaciers in the Witmarsum Colony,
Paraná Basin,
Paraná,
Brazil Greenhouse gas reduction The
evolution of plants following the
Silurian-Devonian Terrestrial Revolution and the subsequent
adaptive radiation of
vascular plants on land began a long-term increase in planetary
oxygen levels. Large
tree ferns, growing to high, were secondarily dominant to the large arborescent
lycopods (30–40 m high) of the
Carboniferous coal forests that flourished in equatorial
swamps stretching from
Appalachia to
Poland, and later on the flanks of the
Urals. The enhanced
carbon sequestration raised the atmospheric oxygen levels to a peak of 35%, and lowered
carbon dioxide level below the 300
parts per million (ppm), possibly as low as 180 ppm during the
Kasimovian, which is today associated with
glacial periods. The reduction of carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere would be enough to begin the process of changing polar climates, leading to cooler summers which could not melt the previous winter's snow accumulations. The growth in snowfields to 6 m deep would create sufficient pressure to convert the lower levels to ice. Research indicates that changing carbon dioxide concentrations were the dominant driver of changes between colder and warmer intervals during the Early and Middle Permian portions of the LPIA. Modelling evidence points to tectonically induced
carbon dioxide removal via silicate weathering to have been sufficient to generate the ice age. The closure of the
Rheic Ocean and
Iapetus Ocean saw disruption of warm-water currents in the
Panthalassa Ocean and
Paleotethys Sea, which may have also been a factor in the development of the LPIA.
Topographic changes The Mississippian witnessed major uplift in southwestern Gondwana, where the earliest glaciations of the LPIA began. The uplift, driven by mantle dynamics rather than by crustal tectonic processes, is evidenced by the increase in temperature of the southwestern Gondwanan crust as shown by changing compositions of granites formed at this time.
Milankovitch cycles The LPIA, like the present
Quaternary glaciation, saw glacial-interglacial cycles governed by
Milankovitch cycles acting on timescales of tens of thousands to millions of years. Periods of low obliquity, which decreased annual insolation at the poles, were associated with high moisture flux from low latitudes and glacial expansion at high latitudes, while periods of high obliquity corresponded to warmer, interglacial periods. Data from Serpukhovian and Moscovian marine strata of South China point to glacioeustasy being driven primarily by long-period eccentricity, with a cyclicity of about 0.405 million years, and the modulation of the amplitude of Earth's obliquity, with a cyclicity of approximately 1.2 million years. This is most similar to the early part of the Late Cenozoic Ice Age, from the
Oligocene to the
Pliocene, before the formation of the
Arctic ice cap, suggesting the climate of this episode of time was relatively warm for an icehouse period. Evidence from the Middle Permian Lucaogou Formation of
Xinjiang, China indicates that the climate of the time was particularly sensitive to the 1.2 million year long-period modulation cycle of obliquity. It also suggests that palaeolakes such as those found in the
Junggar Basin likely played an important role as a
carbon sink during the later stages of the LPIA, with their absorption and release of carbon dioxide acting as powerful feedback loops during
Milankovitch cycle driven glacial and interglacial transitions. Also during this time, unique sedimentary sequences called
cyclothems were deposited. These were produced by the repeated alterations of marine and nonmarine environments resulting from glacioeustatic rises and falls of sea levels linked to Milankovitch cycles. == Biotic effects ==