What this means is that the error
has been reduced by a full order of magnitude and this will now apply across
many other geological questions. Most
satisfying though is this result. We all
know in our heart of hearts that the impact did it for the megafauna at the end
of the cretaceous. Yet a million year
error bound does not make anyone brave.
Now that we have narrowed it to 11000 years and it is still there tells us that it is almost impossible to have an alternative.
We will also now recover an
accurate global spectrum of associated geology with a clear idea of direct
associations. Recall most such processes
actually last thousands of years to begin with.
This is more than accurate enough.
It will still take years to play
out but it is good to see it well begun with this question.
Asteroid Impact That Killed the Dinosaurs: New Evidence
By Charles Choi
The idea that a cosmic impact ended the age of dinosaurs in what is now
Mexico
now has fresh new support, researchers say.
The most recent and most familiar mass extinction is the one
that finished the reign of the dinosaurs — the end-Cretaceous or
Cretaceous-Tertiary extinction event, often known as K-T. The only survivors
among the dinosaurs are the birds.
Currently, the main suspect behind this catastrophe is a
cosmic impact from an asteroid or comet, an idea first proposed by physicist Luis Alvarez and his son geologist Walter Alvarez. Scientists later found that signs of this collision seemed evident near the town of Chicxulub (CHEEK-sheh-loob) in Mexico in the form of a gargantuan crater more than 110 miles (180 kilometers) wide. The explosion, likely caused by an object about 6 miles (10 km) across, would have released as much energy as 100 trillion tons of TNT, more than a billion times more than the atom bombs that destroyed Hiroshima and Nagasaki .
However, further work suggested the
Chicxulub impact occurred either 300,000 years before or 180,000
years after the end-Cretaceous mass extinction. As such, researchers
have explored other possibilities, including other impact sites, such as the controversial
Shiva crater in India, or even massive volcanic eruptions, such as
those creating the Deccan Flats in India .
Timing of an impact
New findings using high-precision radiometric dating analysis of debris
kicked up by the impact now suggest the K-T event and the Chicxulub
collision happened no more than 33,000 years apart. In radiometric dating,
scientists estimate the ages of samples based on the relative proportions of
specific radioactive materials within them.
"We've shown the impact and the mass extinction coincided as much
as one can possibly demonstrate with existing dating techniques,"
researcher Paul Renne, a geochronologist and director of the Berkeley
Geochronology Center in California, told LiveScience.
"It's gratifying to see these results, for those of us who've been
arguing a long time that there was an impact at the time of this mass
extinction," geologist Walter Alvarez at the University of California at
Berkeley, who did not participate in this study, told LiveScience. "This
research is just a tour de force, a demonstration of really skillful
geochronology to resolve time that well."
The fact the impact and mass extinction may have been virtually
simultaneous in time supports the idea that the cosmic impact dealt the age of
dinosaurs its deathblow.
"The impact was clearly the final straw that pushed
Earth past the tipping point," Renne said. "We have shown that
these events are synchronous to within a gnat's eyebrow, and therefore, the
impact clearly played a major role in extinctions, but it probably wasn't just
the impact."
The new extinction date is precise to within 11,000 years.
"When I got started in the field, the error bars on these events
were plus or minus a million years," added paleontologist William Clemens
at the University of California at Berkeley, who did not participate in this
research. "It's an exciting time right now, a lot of which we can
attribute to the work that Paul and his colleagues are doing in refining the
precision of the time scale with which we work."
Final blow
Although the cosmic impact and mass extinction coincided in time, Renne
cautioned this does not mean the impact was the only cause of the die-offs. For
instance, dramatic
climate swings in the preceding million years, including long cold
snaps in the general hothouse environment of the Cretaceous, probably brought
many creatures to the brink of extinction. The volcanic eruptions behind the
Deccan Traps might be one cause of these climate variations.
"These precursory phenomena made the global ecosystem much more
sensitive to even relatively small triggers, so that what otherwise might have
been a fairly minor effect shifted the ecosystem into a new state," Renne
said.
The cosmic impact then proved the deathblow.
"What we really need to do is to understand better what was going
on before the impact — what was the level of ecological stress that existed
that allowed the impact to be the straw that broke the camel's back?"
Renne said. "We also need better dates for the massive volcanism at the Deccan Flats to better understand when it first started
and how fast it occurred."
The scientists detailed their findings in the Feb. 8 issue of the journal Science.
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