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Space Science

Did a Prehistoric Asteroid Breakup Shower Earth With Enough Dust To Change the Climate? (cnn.com) 24

Applehu Akbar writes: CNN reports this week on a paper describing a hypothesis that the breakup of a large asteroid 466 million years ago generated enough dust in Earth's orbit to substantially change the terrestrial climate for an extended period. This would have triggered an 'Ordovician icehouse' climate event, with major effects on biology.
"The 93-mile-wide asteroid was in the asteroid belt located between Mars and Jupiter when it collided with something else and broke apart, creating a wealth of dust that flooded the inner solar system..." CNN reports. "To understand how this process unfolded, the researchers found evidence of space dust locked in 466-million-year-old rocks that were once on the sea floor."

The paper argues that to this day, that collision "still delivers almost a third of all meteorites falling on Earth."
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Did a Prehistoric Asteroid Breakup Shower Earth With Enough Dust To Change the Climate?

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  • Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Sunday September 22, 2019 @11:00AM (#59223516)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • So instead of 1000 trucks of dust a year, it rose dramatically to 1005 trucks of dust per year? No way would this make any difference. This whole thing is just the science deniers trying to make up more stuff for climate change other than the only cause that 97% of all scientists agree on: humans cause climate change. There is no model that says otherwise.. https://www.americanthinker.co... [americanthinker.com]
      • That was poor writing - if you read the preceding paragraph, it's clear that they mean 10 million semis worth of dust *per year*:
        >"Imagine multiplying that by a factor of a thousand or ten thousand."

        You're also either a troll, or deeply misunderstand climate science. There's LOTS of widely accepted reasons for climate change incorporated into all the major climate models - responsibility for the current destabilization is laid at human's feet because all the other causes combined don't explain the chang

        • It said what it said. You can't reinterpret it to mean something else, denier. 5 extra trucks of dust is just noise in the system. You can't make this out to be more than it is by saying the article saying something it doesn't.
          • The source paper is linked right in the summary; you tell me if this [sciencemag.org] looks like a 1.005x change or a 10,000x change.

            None of this has anything to do with modern climate change. It occurred in the mid-Ordovician, 466 million years ago. Any dust still infalling from that isn't going to change overnight.

  • Everything causes climate change. It is impossible for there to be any time or situation anywhere where the climate is not changing. Corresponding to that there will always be causal reasons for that.

    If the intent is to manufacture usage of terms for manipulative purposes, for which using one sense of the term is unarguable, and switching to another sense with wholly different motives and criteria, at least reset to rationality when it's completely necessary, like here.

    Yes, the asteroid caused climate cha

  • by TeknoHog ( 164938 ) on Sunday September 22, 2019 @01:03PM (#59223912) Homepage Journal
    the climate was changing before it was cool.
  • by LordHighExecutioner ( 4245243 ) on Sunday September 22, 2019 @02:12PM (#59224158)
    ...the asteroid involved in the event has been baptised Betteridge-1 [wikipedia.org]
    • "...the asteroid involved in the event has been baptised Betteridge-1 [wikipedia.org]"

      Dammit, you beat be by minutes.

  • Lets try to steer a medium-large asteroid like 99942 Apophis [wikipedia.org] (300m) toward one of our enemies. Iran would be a popular target at the moment. Then we can see if it causes a nuclear winter and a new ice age. Just to prove the warmists wrong. Will it cause a new ice age and make global warming a distant hope rather than a fear? The only way to know for sure is to try it and see what happens.

    Now that is real science. An additional benefit would be that our military power would be feared by all and it would begi

  • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Monday September 23, 2019 @03:44AM (#59225682)
    I mean 93 miles is a pretty exact measurement for something which broke up 466 million years ago.

    Then I realized 93 miles = 150 km. It's probably an estimate based on the volume of debris. This is the sort of thing where the science editors at CNN (probably nonexistent) should've rounded it to 100 miles to maintain (logarithmic) significant figures.

"What man has done, man can aspire to do." -- Jerry Pournelle, about space flight

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