101 Ways To Kill The Dinosaurs 72
blank writes "Everyone knows there are many impact craters on Earth; around 170 in fact. This article from the Seattle PI points out that more than one of those impacts could have caused the extinction of the Dinosaurs. In Ukraine, scientists found that a well-known crater had been inaccurately dated - the correct date puts the impact sometime around when the Dinosaurs disappeared..."
Far side (Score:2)
From The Simpsons.... (Score:1)
Simple really (Score:2, Funny)
For pete's sake. (Score:3, Insightful)
Nothing like a one two punch to really put a cloud in the sky and cool things down.
Agreed. (Score:3, Insightful)
1) Asteroids, meteorites and comets tend (okay, massive generalisation here, but whatever) to travel in packs (a la Leonides and Perseides).
2) I don't kow about you, but I have trouble believing that a single impact could wipe out "all" life without destroying the planet, ripping off the atmosphere, etc...
Re:Agreed. (Score:2, Insightful)
Imho there must have been a major collision relativly close to earth that caused for hurling massive amounts of relativly small asteroids at earth. The chance that a random "pack" of asteroids would all hit earth without direct cause seems to me to be very slim...
Re:Agreed. (Score:1)
Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:4, Informative)
While I'm a geologist who has done a lot of radiometric dating (U-Pb and 40Ar/39Ar), I don't know much about how this particular crater is being dated. However, I can imagine that the heating and melting caused by an impact event actually HELPS you date the event.
Consider a rock. It may have some amount of 40K and 235U and 238U and 232Th that decay over time. The daughter products of those decays (39Ar from K and 206Pb and 207Pb from the U and Th) accumulate within the rock (actually within specific crystals, but I won't get into details) over time. The minerals, however, are only closed systems below a certain temperature (it varies depending on the specific mineral) called the closure temperature. Above the closure temperature, solid state diffusion creates an open system and the daughter products can escape from the crystal structure.
Now if the impact hits and melts the target rocks (heating them way above the closure temperatures of any minerals they may contain), the radiometric clocks in the target materials will be reset! Once the melt cools and solidifies, though, the "rock clocks" will become closed systems again, and radiogenic daughter products will accumulate again.
The best material to go after from the melted target would be stuff that quickly cooled to form glass. Things like tektites. Since they are glassy, we know they cooled very quickly (too fast to form mineral grains). So dating glassy tektites (probably with 40Ar/39Ar, a fancy variant of K-Ar dating) is one way to pinpoint the timing of the impact.
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:2, Informative)
Every dating done on a known-age volcanic rock has resulted in wildly inaccurate data. Example: Mt. St. Helens rocks were dated at (varies by sample, that alone should raise red flags about the radiometric dating concept) values ranging from 350,000 to 2,800,000 years. The samples came from the dome, which was known to be 8 years old at the time of the testing. Apologists for radiometric dating respond that this is a case of poorly selected samples; yet they have no counter-example of a well-chosen sample that shows the correct date. Nor do they answer how to know that tests in other sites are correctly chosen, aside from their rather vicious ad hominem attacks.
Further examples: the Hualalai volcano, which erupted in 1800-1801, was tested at 1,600,000 years old. The Etna volcano eruption of 1792 is dated at 1,410,000 years ago. There are many others but that makes the point - radiometric dating is badly flawed, from K-Ar to C14 to isochrons to Ru-Sr and the rest.
So since every case where the age of a rock is known the measured age is wrong, on what basis is the assumption made that rocks where the age is unknown that the methods are correct?
Science is supposed to be about repeatable experiments with falsifiability criteria. Falsification of radiometric dating is simple: find a rock of known age, if the test can't repeatedly produce the correct answer, then the method is not accurate. So it's time to find another dating method that does produce repeatably correct results with known age samples.
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:2)
Incomplete melting or cooking in other gases can give a higher date. Geologists take radiometric dating with a grain of salt for that reason
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:2, Informative)
And consider the definition of science as requiring both falsifiability and repeatable experiments. Can you cite an example of a known-age rock that was repeatedly accurately dated? If not, then the only proven results of radiometric dating are those that point out its inaccuracies, and there are none that prove its accuracy.
Yes of course many things make radiometric dates potentially inaccurate, such as heating too much or too little, leaching, initial conditions that are other than assumed, proximity to sources of radioactivity, diffusion, etc.
But any measurement used in science needs to be proven to be accurate before it's blindly accepted, and radiometric dating has not achieved that.
Take Carbon-14 as another case. Live mollusks have been tested and, were they able to be surprised, they would have had their shells knocked off by the news that they have been dead for 2300 years according to C14 dating. Or take the writing of Dr. Robert Lee in the Anthropological Journal of Canada in 1981:
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:2)
I can't cite examples. I belive that there are problems with the technique, and that there have been wildly inacurate results published as fact. I do think, though, that science can take uncertianty into account, and still provide valuable insight.
One thing I'm not sure about; when you say 'known age' do you mean 'known to be 2.3 million years old' or ' formed in lava 10 years ago'. As far as I know, there is no other way to date very old rocks than through radiometric dating, and inacuricies in younger rocks doesn't prove much.
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:2)
To use his mollusc example, radiodating is frequently very bad to the point of being useless on very young samples (the definition of very young depends on the technique). Also, carbon dating requires that the organisms derive their carbon from the atmosphere. Molluscs get very little of their carbon from the atmosphere.
The creationists have take a system which is well known to geologists to be bad for carbon dating, applied it anyway, and use the results to discredit radiodating.
However, the only thing which they discredit, is any claim of honest or integrity which they once may have had.
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:1)
However the conclusion remains: radiometric dating has never been verified by anything other than radiometric dating. That is circular reasoning, and it is not a valid basis for science.
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:1, Informative)
there is no way to "please" you in that there is no "brute force" way to prove the techniques in the manner you describe. nevertheless, the theory behind radiometric dating is well understood. moreover, mutiple dates using different systems of material from the same sample have been shown to give consistent results (a rather important and reproducible result you seem to shrug off).
do you have more substantive objections to radiometric dating? have you indeed studied or been trained in the theory behind the various techniques? i hope we can have more in depth discussion of the potential problems behind the techniques than just the naive observation that young samples don't work so good.
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:1)
And yes your insight is quite correct - there is no way to validate the method. However your assertion that the only weak link is the geologic context is, I believe, a bit of an understatement. While the geologic surroundings are quite important, so are simple things like: if the rock is exposed to air and sunlight, diffusion of Ar will be accelerated over a rock buried in a glacier. Similarly a fast-moving stream or river will cause leaching which can effect several of the minerals used in dating.
But perhaps most significant are the assumptions made about both the initial conditions and about the time between formation and measurement. Initial conditions which are not known can have a profound effect on the measurements. And the assumption underlying all of this is generally referred to as "uniformitarianism". To the reader who may be unfamiliar with this term, that is a reference to the assumption that everything is today as it has been in the past, that there were no major disruptions in the environment, that gradual change is the only agent of change.
The opposing theory to uniformitarianism admits that we don't know what conditions were like thousands of years ago, that radioactive decay might be effected by, for example, a neutrino burst from a supernova, or from a different phenomenon that we can't explain today. It also asserts that the Grand Canyon, for example, was not formed over billions of years, but was actually formed far more rapidly (and there is strong evidence of that being the case).
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:1)
How do you explain that one?
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:1)
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:1)
So what are the possible ways to specify the potential falsifiability criteria for radiometric dating? Only if you have access to a known-age sample that you can submit double-blind to a measurement lab, and have repeatable and consistent results obtained therefrom.
Such has never been done for radiometric dating; so as much as theories can be strung together to make a case for radiometric dating, there is still the problem to overcome that the method fails when known-age rocks are tested. And that the assumptions are untested because they are untestable... at least until I get a few more weekends in the garage to finish off the time machine project. It's still going to be hard to fit enough fuel cells in the DeLorean to make it past a gigawatt though...
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:2, Insightful)
1. Radiometric dating works because it is based on solid theory.
2. It does not need to have falsifiability because it's solid
3. Known-age samples test as amazingly old, but that's due to known issues.
But there are major assumptions which have to be accurate in order to use #1 (constant rate of radioactive decay; absolute knowledge of initial conditions; good knowledge of intermediate conditions). Yet no one was around to observe and prove any of those assumptions that you can cite.
To use #2 you again need the above assumptions to be guaranteed.
A simple summary here seems to be that it takes a leap of faith to believe in radiometric dating, one that says we can know what conditions were like in the distant past with sufficient accuracy that we know that dating methods can be used with confidence today.
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:1)
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:2)
We have very good evidence that the laws of physics were the same in the distant as they are now. We can observe the spectra of distant stars, whose light has taken thousands of years to get here. We can observe the motion of stars around the galactic core, maybe 30,000 light years away. The most pertinent example I can think of off hand is that we can track the brightness curves of supernovae [colorado.edu] 170,000 light years away and see that radiactive decay rates were the same then as now.
More evidence decay rates haven't changed (Score:2)
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:1)
"Perhaps there is every reason in your faith, but not in all faiths. Why do I say in your faith? Because there is no proof of your beliefs; and beliefs without proofs are, by definition, rooted in faith."
Science is not a religion.
There is no "faith" in science; there is argument, evidence, and open-mindedness--and people with all of their political and economic agendas to confuse the issues.
I am tired of the creationist trying to ram the mythology of the Old Testament down the throats of every living person. The fact of the matter being, that like the Catholic Church of Copernicus' era, they have spoken on a matter that is not in the realm of religion but in the realm of science. They appeal to the ignorant mythology of a long dead generation to "prove" their assertions. (Was not the age of the earth calculated by counting the generations listed in the old testament and multiplying by the number of "years" each generation was alleged to have lived? What other dating method verifies this?) The assertion that there is a lack of perfection, or consistency, in the dating of rocks is a straw man. The fundamental flaws in the challenges to radioactive decay of rocks demonstrate a lack of understanding more than a serious concern. Pointing to the fact that science, like all other human endeavors, is marked by the flaws and errors inherent in any human system is no more accurate than stating: "If it ain't in the Bible, it ain't true." (A statement attributed to a parishioner at a church I once attended.)
The evidence for use of radioactive decay has assumptions in it. So does every thing else in science. You must understand those assumptions; and make a reasonable account for why they should be correct. Otherwise the conclusion is likely to be flawed. But with the dating of rocks, the assumptions when properly accounted for, lead to a technique that is both reasonable in the context of what we know about radiation and decay, and in what we know about the behavior of atoms in rocks. Questioning the results of dating rocks is good; but trying to discredit a scientific measurement because it does not fit with a deeply held belief is stupid.
As a deeply religious person, and a scientist, I am aware of the fallibility of human thinking. But we have built so much with our knowledge. So much in fact that we must be mastering the concepts of radiation, and chemistry, and geology, and so on and so forth. It is not the place for religion to tell us about chemistry, or geology, or any of the things in the physical world. It is the place of religion to guide the application of our knowledge so that we do as little harm as possible to our fellow man and the world that we live on.
There is an assumption in creationism that is not challenged in the creationist view: The Bible, as written, is true. But it was written by men who were both ignorant and flawed. Is it not possible that they screwed up? Or that those men who came after them screwed up? Or that some corrupt man altered the book to fit another purpose? We have only to look at the history of the Catholic Church over the last seventeen centuries to see that religion can be horribly perverted to persecute. (Or look at Islam, or Protestantism, or Hinduism and see the evil of man.) Why should we expect better of the writers and keepers of the Old Testament?
Anyone arguing that the world is a few thousand years old, based on a single historical reference book, is as foolish as those who once argued that the sun and the entire universe revolved around the earth.
Perhaps you should get your head out of your ideology and really look at the wonders that the Lord has made for you. Everything that I have seen in science has made a far greater impression on my belief in a very wise creator than anything written by long dead men with a political and religious agenda. It would be nice for the ideology of the young earthers to get their heads out of the sand and really look at the world that has been made and to really be impressed.
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:1)
Sigh..
1. Processes are consistent and gradual, and have been for all time (uniformitarianism).
No, uniformitarianism simply means that the laws of physics haven't changed over time.
2. The universe started from nothing.
That's what the creationists say as well.. although the notion of the universe having a start at all is up for debate.
3. Life started from stochastic processes.
Stochastic? No serious scientist has ever put forward the model you give below. But you knew that...
4. "The cosmos is all there is, or was, or ever will be" (Carl Sagan)
Well, I'd be happy to see any evidence to the contrary.
Why, one wonders, would a professed young-earther even be bothered by weather abiogenesis was possable or not... come to think of it, if the earth was young there would by literally tons of *positive* evidence for it instead of none.
Indeed - if you have faith that the earth is young, the bible is literally true, that miracles happen, etc, etc.. why bother with arguments that you know - and have been repeatedly told - are lies? You can explain away *any* evidence with miracles so why lie instead? It's dishonest.
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:1)
You say that "the notion of the universe having a start at all is up for debate". Then where did all this matter and energy come from? Better yet, regardless of whether the universe had a beginning, where did the physical laws come from? In your non-theistic worldview, what made F=ma work everywhere?
Contrary to your assertion, the complement of uniformitarianism is catastrophism, as pointed out by an earlier poster in this thread.
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:1)
You claim that "no serious scientist has ever put forward the model" of stochastic processes of abiogenesis. Will you break the news to Stanley Miller, Harold Urey, A.I. Oparin, and oh so many others that hold to that theory.
References, please. The notion that all the ingredients for a complete bacteria suddenly and randomly came together is one I've only ever heard from creationists.
Have a look at this. [gla.ac.uk]
Then where did all this matter and energy come from?
You are forgetting that terms like 'from' have no meaning without the prior existance of the universe.
? Better yet, regardless of whether the universe had a beginning, where did the physical laws come from? In your non-theistic worldview, what made F=ma work everywhere?
The physical laws are part of the universe. Since we could not observe a different set of laws, there is no reason to suppose they are specially created for us. Of course, if these laws wer not invariant, we could not observe them either. Arbitary hypotheses ('goddidit' for example) offer no more explanitory power than simply saying 'we don't know', apart from the latter being more honest.
Contrary to your assertion, the complement of uniformitarianism is catastrophism, as pointed out by an earlier poster in this thread.
Yes, the two complement one another. Occasionally catastrophic changes are a result of the laws of physics. Of course, you failed to really reply to my statement - was it not in the script?
Nice to see you failed to provide any positive evidence for your own views, and failed to answer why you even bother with abiogenesis arguments if the earth is young. At least try and have some self respect.
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:1)
I asked you where the energy came from; using the laws of thermodynamics which you claim are just an inherent feature of the universe, it is plain to see that the energy we have today came from somewhere, as in your model it must be running down as entropy increases. So if energy is decreasing as time goes forward, it was more in the past than it is now. Where did it come from? You're using at least as much faith as I am if you don't have an answer for that. No problem with that, but it's not science.
You engage in interesting debating styles, trying to shift the burden of proof from yourself all the time. However the burden remains squarely in your court - simply stating that the physical laws are part of the universe does not address their origin. Nor does that address origin of life nor of matter. Since you're very interested in proof, what proof do you have of these points you make?
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:1)
You cite one reference from 1968; your dismissal of the research I quote is 'It's hand waving'. Let's face it, you couldn't understand a word of it, you skimmed it and you don't want to face it. And you still haven't told me why the abiogenesis debate actually matters to you.
I'm not trying to 'shift the burden of proof', I'm merely trying to make you honest. And if you claim a young earth, then you are obliged to provide some evidence. If you can't, retract the claim. As a creationist, you should know better than to actually claim something yourself, you should spend all your time ignorant 'soundbite' attacks of scientific theories.
As I pointed out, the question 'where did the universe come from' is meaningless. Citing supernatural entities is simply pusing the question back; where did they come from?
As for a 'proof' - claiming the existance of a god requires proof positive; the default position is that no gods exist. As there is no evidence, anywhere, of a supernatural event actually happening, then it is reasonable to rule out supernatural explanations of origins.
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:1)
Polonium halos (refuted) [talkorigins.org] and magnetic field decline (Something that has happened several thousand times in geological history!) [talkorigins.org] are hardly evidence for a young earth. No doubt you've been told that many, many times.
I am very interested in why you wish to show abiogenesis as absurd despite it being totally irrelevant if the earth is young. It is certainly worth you taking time to explain this, because personally, I think that you have no coherent set of ideas apart from making disjointed attacks on various theories in biology, geology and astrophysics.
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:1)
The same goes for the magnetic field issue page you linked to. It deals with the flaws in Barnes' theory, something that is also addressed by Humphreys paper that I gave you the link to. And if you had actually read the paper, you would have realized that. Humphreys paper provides a detailed mechanism of how the field reversed in the past.
Please, if you're going to try to argue against these points, read the original papers. Just pulling links off the 'net from dogmatic pop-sci sites makes it clear you either don't have the time or for some other reason don't care to read the papers. But without having read them, it's very difficult to carry on a detailed discussion about them.
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:1)
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:1)
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:1)
The decay of the geomagnetic field is well known. However, your author has to introduce rapid flips to match the evidence - and of course, the very record of those flips shows how long they took; if the sea floors were produced quickly (as in a flood), the oceans would have boiled. This is not evidence for a young earth.
As regards polonium halos - they are the result of Radon migration. The idea that these granites were formed suddenly with these radioactive isotopes give a big problem - why are there no isotopes with half-lives in the 10000-50 million year range (or decay evidence for them)? For example, technitium would still be present if the earth was young and formed with all of these isotopes - but it is not. Why?
And you still haven't anserwed the question on the relevance of abiogenesis.
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:1)
Regarding the magnetic field energy decline, perhaps the most significant point in the paper by Dr. Humphreys is the conclusive proof that the decline in the dipole moment field energy is not matched by an increase in the non-dipole moment field energy. That key conclusion is a proof for a young earth which you demanded.
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:2)
How come the title of the journal is in Latin (Geochemica et Cosmochimica Acta), and the text of the article is in English?
This reminds me of another: title of the journal in English (Dead Sea Scrolls) and the text in Hebrew!
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:2, Interesting)
Every dating done on a known-age volcanic rock has resulted in wildly inaccurate data. Example: Mt. St. Helens rocks were dated at (varies by sample, that alone should raise red flags about the radiometric dating concept) values ranging from 350,000 to 2,800,000 years.
This was the dating of phenocrysts and xenoliths - rocks that soldified before the eruption. Strange you failed to mention this. Of course, if you are talking about a 500 million year old rock, a systematic error of 2 million years isn't that important.
There are many others but that makes the point - radiometric dating is badly flawed, from K-Ar to C14 to isochrons to Ru-Sr and the rest.
I'd like to see how you think isochrons are flawed. Radiometric dating does have independant testing - different methods can be used on the same rock, and importantly, relative dating techniques can be applied (superposition, timing of fault movement, etc.). There is no way of other physical processes systematicaly changing the dates - a neutron flux would, for instance, make some dates look much younger and others much older. Changing basic physical constants has the same effect.
One independant technique that has been used successfully is that of sea floor dating. Since we know where - and at what temperature - sea floor crust is formed, we can calculate how old it is according to the depth using heat flow calculations. These calculated dates agree with the radiometric dates, AND dates calculated from sea floor spreading rates. So three independant methods all agree.
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:1)
a) That several different radiometric dates 'just happen' to agree.
b) That this value *also* agrees with thermal conduction/contraction models, and
c) That this value *also* agrees with ages derived from spreading rates, and
That this is all a coincidence.
Could you perhaps explain to me a model that has a different age *and* accounts for all of this? Remember that if you start changing the laws of physics for one, it'll rebound for the others.
Or will you just run away?
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:1)
Will you ignore the fact that radiometric dating frequently produces different answers for one set of samples, and that the "correct" date is then selected?
Experimental error happens. Indeed, creationists go to great lengths to find examples of such:
Bad dates [btinternet.co.uk]The data is taken from a creationist publication that mined the literature for examples of bad dates - yet they STILL average out to being correct!
Will you ignore the fact that the most widely accepted model of continental drift now in favor is one put forward by a creationist, as his computer model explains things that nothing else does?
What, this one?
Flood/catastrophic plate tectonics model [icr.org]You do realise that this model implies that the entire ocean floor was created in a year? Given that the oceanic crust is 6km thick and covers 53% of the planet, this implies that the entire ocean was boiled off. This model is not 'widely accepted', it is wrong.
Problems with floods.. [talkorigins.org]You have, of course, still failed to answer with regard to the thermal gradients and cooling in the oceans, why all the different radiometric techniques give the same age, and why the ages agree with those given by continental drift extrapolation. Hell, I even have to post your arguments or you!
The question is not my open-mindedness - I'm fully prepared to take creationist arguments on their merits. You are the one dismissing science without even learning about it first. THAT is closed mindedness and you know it.
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:2)
Now would be the time were you present some supporting information on this slur that you've just cast on the scientific community. I know that I'll be waiting in vain for you to supply some.
Will you ignore the fact that the most widely accepted model of continental drift now in favor is one put forward by a creationist, as his computer model explains things that nothing else does?
What objective evidence do you have for his model being the most widely accepted?
Re:Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:2)
This article [austarnet.com.au] shows how your reference plays up small differences in dating.
Error margins? (Score:2)
re:
<RantMode>
Why do people (the 'media' in particular) always miss out the error margins when quoting scientific results? The first thing you should learn when doing any form of quantitative science is error analysis: without this all the results are meaningless as you have no idea of the certainty or significance of them.
For example, with these results you quote, if the measured result were actually 2.8 Million years +/- 2 million years, then that would not give any cause for concern, or 350 thousand years +/- 10 million years would be as good as spot on. OTOH if the results were 2.8 Million +/- 1 year then we should definitely be questioning the accuracy of such measurements.
<RantMode>Re: Effects on Radioactive dating (Score:1)
> Does anyone with a better knowledge of radioactive dating than me know what kind of effect these impacts have on radioactive dating methods?
Hope springs eternal in creationists' breasts.
Carbon Dating. (Score:1)
There was a small mountain with a lake and trees coverign it etc somewhere that was dated as much older than the earth itself, because if the readioactive Carbon caused by such a collision. Actually, that radioactive carbon is what heats the lake: It's a regular paradise
Re:Carbon Dating. (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Carbon Dating. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Carbon Dating. (Score:2)
First C-14 is the only readioactive form of carbon used for radiometric dating. No physical collision at any speed that occurs in the earth's vicinity could produce it. The isotope is produced by the interaction of cosmic rays and N-14 (that is a nitrogen isotope). The C-14 later decays reverting to N-14 and emitting a neutrino. The produciton of C-14 takes place within the earth's atmosphere. The atmosphere alone contains enough gas in any form to act as a significant source to donate radiocarbon into the biosphere. No significant amount of carbon arrives from space and no C-12 coming from space could have any significance to the production of C-14; they are not related, and C-12 plays no roll in the existence of C-14.
Second, who ever told you about the "small mountain" had a serious case of rectal-cranial inversion. Additional radiocarbon would cause an organic mass to appear younger, not older, though many thoroughly confused and consistently ignorant creationists persist in thinking the opposite.
Last and most important, radiocarbon has a half-life of about 50,000 years and a useabilility range for dating purposes of about 100,000 years at best, if accelerated mass spectroscopy dating methods are employed. Since dinosaurs disappeared from the planet about 70,000,000 years ago, radiocarbon is useless, because about 1400 half-lives of radio carbon have passed. For practical purposes that means that there is no C-14 left in any sample you look at.
Re:Carbon Dating. (Score:2)
Thanks for the correction. It is why there is peer review in science.
Multiple Impacts (Score:2)
Shoemaker-Levy 9 did to Jupiter. Are there any known examples of related impact sites on earth? I imagine that'd be hard to prove, but it would be a neat piece of trivia.
I killed the dinosaurs (Score:3, Funny)
Catastrophism vs. Gradualism (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Catastrophism vs. Gradualism (Score:4, Insightful)
Events at the KT boundary:
1: Long term climate change, over 10 million years or so; a fairly gradual cooling with changes in sea level. Makes the dinosaurs less energy efficient.
2: Medium term, repeated massive volcanic events in the Deccan Traps. These would cause repeated climatic fluctuations; again this is bad for the big animals.
3: Short term, one or more asteroid collisions causing a very severe short term climatic shock.
It's worth pointing out that if you have any one of these in isolation - which has happened many times - you do NOT get an extinction on the KT scale. Personally I go for the 'It was everything at once what diddit' theory.
Re:Catastrophism vs. Gradualism (Score:1)
and also the precursory event leading to my run on thoughts and sentences...