A six-mile-wide asteroid is believed to have crashed into what is now Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula 65 million years ago, triggering a blast that spread death and destruction around the globe.
UAF scientist Michael Whalen is part of a research team that offered a new analysis to support the theory that an asteroid wiped out the dinosaurs. A report on their work was published in the journal Science March 5.
A UAF press release says:
Scientists first proposed the asteroid impact theory of dinosaur mass extinction 30 years ago. The discovery of a massive crater at Chicxulub [CHICK-shuh-loob], in Mexico’s Yucatán Peninsula in 1991, strengthened that hypothesis. The Chicxulub crater is more than 120 miles wide—about the distance from Fairbanks to the Arctic Circle—and scientists believe it was created when an asteroid more than six miles wide crashed into Earth 65 million years ago. The cataclysmic impact—a million times more powerful than the largest nuclear bomb ever tested—triggered massive earthquakes, atmospheric discharge and oceanic upheaval. The ensuing mass extinction ended both the reign of the dinosaurs and the Cretaceous period, which gave way to the Paleogene period. This theory, having steadily accumulated evidence, was thought to be a near-consensus view.
Recently, however, in a series of articles, researchers posed an alternate hypothesis for the mass extinction. Some scientists claim that long-term volcanic activity at the Deccan Traps, in what is now India, caused acid rain and global cooling, gradually making life untenable for the dinosaurs and other large animals. They also suggest that the Chicxulub impact occurred some 300,000 years before the mass extinctions.
The alternate hypothesis spurred Whalen and other Chicxulub impact proponents to respond. The current Science article dispels the Deccan Traps hypothesis, arguing that the geological record favors the Chicxulub impact event theory.
“It’s as tight a case for a synchronous chain of events as we can find in the fossil record,” Whalen said.
Whalen is an associate professor at the UAF geology and geophysics department and the Geophysical Institute. He first began studying the Chicxulub site in 2002. His expertise is in carbonate rock, or limestone—a handy specialty, as limestone forms the layers above the Cretaceous-Paleogene geological boundary in the Chicxulub crater. He studied a 2001 core from the crater and compared it to seismic data gathered in 2006. His analysis offered insight on the geography of the area prior to impact, how it changed during the impact and the eventual infill of the crater by limestones deposited after the impact event.
Another impact.
Will definitely eliminate human caused environmental damage.
Be not worry, your new free health care will make sure you survive in good health.
As for the news press release,
It sounds like a computer generated post in DNM's chat rooms.
kisup