TRUE POLAR WANDER, METHANE, AND MOLECULAR CLOCK COMPRESSION OF THE CAMBRIAN EXPLOSION
We have presented a testable hypothesis linking multiple true polar wander events, the Cambrian Carbon Cycles, and the Cambrian Explosion through global greenhouse cycling caused by iterative destabilization of extensive methane clathrate deposits during a legacy of TPW-driven thermohaline eddy and marine sedimentation regime instability[3].
Since generation time in any given phylum varies inversely with ambient temperature, our "True Polar Wander-Clathrate" hypothesis for the Cambrian Explosion predicts an increased intrinsic rate of speciation during the Cambrian Explosion, consistent with independent estimates from geochronologic recalibration of the Cambrian timescale.
We note here a specific but generalizable example in which molecular clock estimates for the divergence of clades are incremented non-linearly. Allopatric speciation and population bottleneck events cause biased divergence date estimates that may be in error by ~33%. Unexpectedly old molecular clock estimates for the last common ancestor of bilateria and metazoans may reflect artifacts induced by enhanced allopatric speciation during the Cambrian Explosion.
[1] D.A. Evans, R.L. Ripperdan and J.L. Kirschvink, Polar Wander and the Cambrian, Science, 279 (1998) 9a-9e. [2] D.A.D. Evans, True polar wander and supercontinents, Tectonophysics, 362 (2003) 303-320. [3] J.L. Kirschvink and T.D. Raub, A methane fuse for the Cambrian explosion: carbon cycles and true polar wander, C. R. Geosci., 335 (2003) 65-78. [4] J.L. Kirschvink, R.L. Ripperdan and D.A. Evans, Evidence for a large-scale Early Cambrian reorganization of continental masses by inertial interchange true polar wander., Science, 277 (1997) 541-545.