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Space

Asteroid Impact, Not Volcanic Activity, Killed the Dinosaurs, Study Finds (space.com) 62

Scientists have gone back and forth over exactly what caused a mass extinction event 66 million years ago, which destroyed about 75% of all life on Earth, including all of the large dinosaurs. Some have thought that volcanic activity could be to blame, but one new study shows that a giant asteroid impact was the prime culprit. Space.com reports: In a new study, researchers from Imperial College London, the University of Bristol and University College London have shown that the asteroid impact, not volcanic activity, was the main reason that about 75% of life on Earth perished at that time, and it did so by significantly interfering with Earth's climate and ecosystems. To come to this conclusion, the researchers modeled how Earth's climate would be expected to respond to two separate possible extinction causes: volcanism and asteroid impact. In these mathematical models, they included environmental factors including rainfall and temperature, which would have been critical to the survival of these species. They also included the presence of sunlight-blocking gases and particles and carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas. With these models, the team found that the giant asteroid hitting our planet would have released tremendous amounts of gas and particles into Earth's atmosphere, blocking out the sun for years on end. This effect would have created a sort of semi-permanent winter on Earth, making the planet unlivable for most of its inhabitants.

Now, while the team found the asteroid impact to be the major factor in making Earth unlivable for most animals, they also found that volcanic activity could have actually helped life to recover over time, a conclusion that scientists have drawn before. They found that, while volcanoes do release sunlight-blocking gases and particles, which would have helped to block the sun in the short term, they also release large amounts of carbon dioxide which, because it's a greenhouse gas, would have built up in the atmosphere and warmed the planet. So, as the researchers suggest in this work, while the devastating winter caused by the asteroid killed off most life on Earth, over time, the warming effect created from the volcanic greenhouse gases could have helped to restore life to habitats.
The study has been published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
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Asteroid Impact, Not Volcanic Activity, Killed the Dinosaurs, Study Finds

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  • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Wednesday July 01, 2020 @02:42AM (#60249582)

    How is this news? The iridium in the ash deposit at the KT boundary established decades ago that it was an asteroid impact.

    Iridium anomaly [wikipedia.org]

    • There were some interesting theories that the meteor impact triggered volcano activity elsewhere on Earth. There was an article in Discover magazine at https://www.discovermagazine.c... [discovermagazine.com] about the idea.

      • Two birds with one stone, so to speak.

        Always recommended, if you have the means.

      • Re:Iridium anomaly (Score:5, Interesting)

        by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Wednesday July 01, 2020 @03:29AM (#60249644)

        If the impact triggered volcanoes, they would have likely been mafic volcanoes spewing out molten basalt. Mafic volcanoes generate much less ash and dust than felsic volcanoes.

        They also produce wide basalt shields like the Siberian Traps [wikipedia.org] which occurred at the PT boundary 180 million years earlier. So where is the basalt shield? Where is the layer of basaltic ash? It should be sitting right on top of the iridium, but it isn't there.

        • by rho ( 6063 )

          Mafic volcanoes ... felsic volcanoes

          Found my next band name, and the name of the first album

      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        Well, the impact and subsequent major vibrations would not have triggered volcanoes they would have triggered substantively accelerated tectonic plate movement and that plate movement with association with altered magma flows, would have triggered extra volcanoes, and due to chaos, they would have been all over the place. Sort of like hundreds of thousand of years of tectonic plate movement compressed over several months, with the most acceleration in the first few days. A wobbly plate of jelly in slow moti

        • There has been some discussion that the impact accelerated the output of the Deccan Traps, which had been erupting already. They are basically antipodal to the impact site. May not have been the nail in the coffin, but it wouldn't have helped either.
          • ...the Deccan Traps... basically antipodal to the impact site...

            Not really antipodal-- Deccan traps are 17–24N, 73–74E, Chicxulub impact structure is 2124N 8931W.

            That's about 40 off the antipode-- not very close.

        • Even with intermediate steps over the course of a few months, I would call that "triggered by the asteroid strike". It wouldn't have occurred without the asteroid strike.

          Like system failures triggered by a software update. the causality doesn't have to be immediate and may not be specifically predictable before the trigger event.

    • by lgw ( 121541 )

      How is this news? The iridium in the ash deposit at the KT boundary established decades ago that it was an asteroid impact.

      The correlation is evident. The precise causation is often questioned. Remember that even thin layers are smeared out over quite a large time period, so the order of events isn't so clear.

      I thought there were a number of theories that the dinosaurs were nearing extinction already, and the asteroid just finished them off. Has that fallen out of favor?

      • The correlation is evident. The precise causation is often questioned. Remember that even thin layers are smeared out over quite a large time period,

        Always something to worry about, but in this case, the iridium-rich layer is remarkably thin: 3-4 cm. http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.g... [gsu.edu]

        And it is precisely correlated with the extinction of a large number of foraminifera species. Unlike, say, large animal fossils (like: dinosaur bones), which are rare and can straddle multiple layers, the microscopic foraminifera are abundant and small, a pretty clear marker of the extinction https://pubs.geoscienceworld.o... [geoscienceworld.org]

        • by lgw ( 121541 )

          But it doesn't establish how near extinction dinosaurs were at the time. Those were the theories I was talking about.

    • It's also been proposed that it was due to pollen allergies, the obvious answer is that 30 foot tall dinosaurs need a lot of food to stay alive and if you block out 70% of the sunlight that creates problems
    • The interesting thing about Science, is it isn't fixed. It will constantly re-look and re-evaluate their hypothesis's and even give a theory an other shot, if they find some new data that make put it into question.

      If in 100 million years archeologists look at our evidence. They may come up with rational but inaccurate hypothesis of what our time period was like. A large amount of rare minerals out of place, Nearly pure Iron and Carbon layers in some spots. They may see it as some sort of Super Volcano t

    • by Livius ( 318358 )

      I think it's great when there's new evidence, new calculations, new discussion etc. even on what seems like largely settled science, but it is not all that clear what's new this time. For a while it's been the censensus (as I understood it) that ecosystems were already in distress from volcanic activity but the meteor impact was major factor, with some minor disagreement as to the relative contributions of those two causes.

  • OK, lets see how long before climate change deniers get here. Concluding that "see, carbon dioxide is good" (one step after "it's not happening" and "we are not causing it").

    Which is certainly true, that CO2 is good - it's rather essential for both a suitable climate and as a part in photosynthesis. But that doesn't say anything that *more* CO2 is better, and specifically nothing about whether a rapid increase in CO2 is good for us humans, our habitats and our food and water supply.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward
      You're the only one saying that in this thread, as far I can see.
  • by Ecuador ( 740021 ) on Wednesday July 01, 2020 @04:00AM (#60249692) Homepage

    I thought it was established for quite a while now that a meteor impact in the Yucatan Peninsula was the cause for the chain of events that led to the mass extinction. I won't read the paper, maybe it has some nice insights for scientists into this stuff, but it is definitely not news.

    • I thought it was established for quite a while now that a meteor impact in the Yucatan Peninsula was the cause for the chain of events that led to the mass extinction. I won't read the paper, maybe it has some nice insights for scientists into this stuff, but it is definitely not news.

      You thought wrong. There are a number of competing theories to explain the Cretaceous–Tertiary extinction event and the asteroid impact is just one of them. The Cretaceous–Tertiary extinction could just as easily have been caused by a combination of events as it could have been caused by an asteroid impact (or any other single event) all by itself. Anybody who wants to argue for some single event being an explanation for the Cretaceous–Tertiary extinction has to provide a preponderance of

  • If the earth can survive being hit by a 6 mile wide lump of rock going at 5 miles per second it can survive (long term) any kind of mess we make of the biosphere. Of course whether we'll survive is another matter.

    • The problem is that with the way we're headed, we'll survive but nothing else will.

      • At one time, Lake Michigan was a commercial fishery. Today, even with the conservation efforts, even with the knowledge of how to manage fisheries, even with a single, unified government controlling it, it still cannot produce the same yield of fish it did just a century ago.

        If we could not prevent that ecological catastrophe, even though we had the science and political will to do so, what makes you think a politically divided world can do any better with global climate change?

        Let's just face it: Glo

        • Having a substantial portion of the Earth's carbon sequestered in its crust is not conducive to life, and life will adapt to the changes.

          Errrr... what is this even supposed to mean? Life on Earth has thrived just fine with and without "a substantial portion of Earth's carbon sequestered in its crust" as the second part of your statement implies.

          The only question is if any such changes happen gradually enough so that we and the lifeforms we depend on having with us, can adapt and thrive.

          • It's supposed to mean one of the limiting factors in the amount of biomass on the planet is the amount of carbon in the carbon cycle. Consequently, the possibility exists that life will adapt to use this extra carbon, alleviating the food-shortage problems overpopulation would otherwise cause.
            • Sorry, but that hardly seems relevant (or accurate) given the recent rapid decline of biodiversity thanks to factors outside [wikipedia.org] of a lack of "the amount of carbon in the carbon cycle".
  • Wow the information is amazing. Thank you.
  • And every 12-year-old kid in the entire world didn't know this?

  • I didn't realize that God had a large slingshot, an infinite number of pebbles, and was really THAT good of a shot.

    CRASH. THUMP. "HAAA! Got another one! Only Thirty Million or so to go now. Damn, those flying ones are hard to hit, they keep moving around."

    "Hmmmm? You called? But I like birds."
  • A gravitational event wiped out the large Dinosaurs, the is no way that animals as large as dinosaurs could support there own weight with our current gravity, so gravity must have been lower in the time of large Dinosaurs, and the reason that all the large animals disappeared at the same time and other animals didn't, is a result of impact, whatever hit our planet, hit it so hard that our orbit around the sun changed (moved closer would be my guess) and our gravity changed and the large Dinosaurs could not

  • To quickly warn the planet after the next asteroid instead of suffering through a long winter.

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