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OKIsItJustMe

(19,938 posts)
Tue Mar 6, 2012, 12:58 PM Mar 2012

Study Jointly Led by UCSB Researcher Supports Theory of Extraterrestrial Impact (Younger Dryas)

http://www.ia.ucsb.edu/pa/display.aspx?pkey=2662
[font face=Times, Times New Roman, Serif][font size=5]Study Jointly Led by UCSB Researcher Supports Theory of Extraterrestrial Impact[/font]

March 5, 2012

[font size=3](Santa Barbara, Calif.) –– A 16-member international team of researchers that includes James Kennett, professor of earth science at UC Santa Barbara, has identified a nearly 13,000-year-old layer of thin, dark sediment buried in the floor of Lake Cuitzeo in central Mexico. The sediment layer contains an exotic assemblage of materials, including nanodiamonds, impact spherules, and more, which, according to the researchers, are the result of a cosmic body impacting Earth.

These new data are the latest to strongly support of a controversial hypothesis proposing that a major cosmic impact with Earth occurred 12,900 years ago at the onset of an unusual cold climatic period called the Younger Dryas. The researchers' findings appear today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Conducting a wide range of exhaustive tests, the researchers conclusively identified a family of nanodiamonds, including the impact form of nanodiamonds called lonsdaleite, which is unique to cosmic impact. The researchers also found spherules that had collided at high velocities with other spherules during the chaos of impact. Such features, Kennett noted, could not have formed through anthropogenic, volcanic, or other natural terrestrial processes. "These materials form only through cosmic impact," he said.

The data suggest that a comet or asteroid –– likely a large, previously fragmented body, greater than several hundred meters in diameter –– entered the atmosphere at a relatively shallow angle. The heat at impact burned biomass, melted surface rocks, and caused major environmental disruption. "These results are consistent with earlier reported discoveries throughout North America of abrupt ecosystem change, megafaunal extinction, and human cultural change and population reduction," Kennett explained.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1110614109
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Study Jointly Led by UCSB Researcher Supports Theory of Extraterrestrial Impact (Younger Dryas) (Original Post) OKIsItJustMe Mar 2012 OP
that is interesting phantom power Mar 2012 #1
They've been arguing this theory back and forth for a while starroute Mar 2012 #2

starroute

(12,977 posts)
2. They've been arguing this theory back and forth for a while
Tue Mar 6, 2012, 07:56 PM
Mar 2012

Last spring there was a article (http://www.miller-mccune.com/science/comet-claim-comes-crashing-to-earth-31180/) which claimed it had been debunked, saying that the nanodiamonds and magnetic spherules cited as evidence for it either had been misdated or couldn't be found by other scientists and suggesting the whole thing might have been a hoax from the start.

So I'm confused -- but pleased -- so see they're now speaking of "conclusive" evidence in favor.

This theory is, by the way, the other half of the story which appeared last week about evidence that Ice Age Europeans made their way by sea along the edge of the ice cap to become the earliest settlers of North America. The idea is that an impact somewhere in North America greatly reduced the human population -- and wiped out much of the megafauna on which they depended -- opening the way for a second wave of settlers from Siberia to move in and absorb the limited remnants of the original settlers.

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