Cave  formations record Black Sea deluges 
 
Stalagmites in Turkish grotto document  670,000 years of flooding
 
By _Daniel Strain_ 
(http://www.sciencenews.org/view/authored/id/178/name/Daniel_Strain)  
Web edition : Wednesday, March 16th, 2011 


 
 
Noah, better get more arks. Over hundreds of millennia large floods drowned 
 the Black Sea and its environs over and over again, a new study shows. 
Using chemical cues stuck in cave stalagmites, an international team of  
researchers has drawn up the most complete record to date of Black Sea 
flooding.  And the sea’s history is stormy indeed, researchers report online 
March 
13 in  Nature Geoscience. The Mediterranean may have rushed over Turkey and  
into the Black Sea at least 12 times over the past 670,000 years. 
“It’s a very dynamic region,” says study coauthor Dominik Fleitmann. 
Dynamic, but until recently not well studied. Fossils and mineral samples  
from deep-sea cores hinted at the Black Sea’s floody past, but available 
tools  couldn't accurately date those deluges, says Fleitmann, a geologist at 
the  University of Bern in Switzerland. The solution, it seems, lay hundreds 
of  meters into a sandy-brown and drippy Turkish cave called Sofular about 
10  kilometers south of the Black Sea. 
As water evaporates off the Black Sea, a massive body of water today about  
two kilometers deep, it forms clouds, leading to rain and puddles in the 
area  nearby. Thousands of years of puddles dripping down into Sofular Cave 
formed  stalagmites, the spiky formations that stick up from cave floors. “
Stalagmites  are petrified precipitation,” Fleitmann says. Like striped 
Popsicles, some of  these petrified rainstorms contain easy-to-date layers with 
distinct chemical  flavors: Oxygen atoms from evaporated salt water tend to 
weigh more than those  from fresh water. So the stalagmites in Sofular Cave 
give a record of the  saltiness of the neighboring Black Sea going back 
hundreds of thousands of  years, though with gaps of tens of thousands of years 
in 
places. 
According to this Popsicle-flavor chronology, the Mediterranean Sea  
frequently overflowed the Bosporus Strait, the narrow channel connecting the  
Black and Aegean seas near Istanbul, mixing marine and fresh waters. The 
Caspian 
 Sea, which today sits hundreds of kilometers to the east, also dumped into 
the  Black Sea at least seven times. It all had to do with glaciers, 
Fleitmann says:  “When you start melting the ice, global sea level rises. And 
the 
same was true  for the Caspian Sea.” Meltwater filled oceans and the Caspian 
Sea to the brim,  and the overflow then gushed into the Black Sea. 
As for the coming flood (sea levels across the globe continue to climb), 
the  Black Sea won’t turn fresh any time soon, Fleitmann says. “The Black Sea 
will  remain a brackish sea.” 
“These cave deposits are extremely interesting data,” says William Ryan, a 
 marine geologist at Columbia University’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory 
in  Palisades, N.Y. He's already started using Fleitmann's timeline in his 
own Black  Sea research. 
Flood studies aren’t interesting just for cradle-of-civilization fans.  
Geologists can infer a lot about ancient Eurasian glaciers from these records.  
Biologists, too, will be able to explore how the region’s plants and 
animals  responded to the frequent soakings. “The faunal assemblage has changed 
 
dramatically between the lake and the marine times,” he says. 
Biblical historians may want to take note as well. Ryan and colleagues  
previously proposed that the most recent Black Sea flood may have been 
literally  biblical, with sea waters surging into Turkey in a relatively short 
time 
span.  The theory gained a lot of attention because this disaster about 
7,000 years ago  could have inspired flood legends like Noah’s Earth-drowning 
deluge. Fleitmann,  however, thinks this Mediterranean spillover was more of a 
trickle. “I think it  was a gradual change,” he says. 
So Noah would’ve had plenty of time to build his ark. 
_http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/71291/title/Cave_formations_reco
rd_Black_Sea_deluges_ 
(http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/71291/title/Cave_formations_record_Black_Sea_deluges)

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