Back home   |   Bookmark   |   Start page   |   Site map    
Services
News
Channels
Home & Family
Leisure
Technology
Business
Science
Site Search
Free email




Comet may have exploded over north america 13,000 years ago

TheAllINeed.com
(NC&T/NSF) The discovery was made by scientists from the University of California at Santa Barbara and their colleagues. James Kennett, a paleoceanographer at the university, said that the discovery may explain some of the highly debated geologic controversies of recent decades.

The period in question is called the Younger Dryas, an interval of abrupt cooling that lasted for about 1,000 years and occurred at the beginning of an inter-glacial warm period. Evidence for the temperature change is recorded in marine sediments and ice cores.

According to the scientists, the comet before fragmentation must have been about four kilometers across, and either exploded in the atmosphere or had fragments hit the Laurentide ice sheet in the northeastern North America.

Wildfires across the continent would have resulted from the fiery impact, killing off vegetation that was the food supply of many of larger mammals like the woolly mammoths, causing them to go extinct.

Since the Clovis people of North America hunted the mammoths as a major source of their food, they too would have been affected by the impact. Their culture eventually died out.

A "black mat" of algal growth in Arizona marks the extinction of mammoths 12,900 years ago. (Photo: Allen West, UCSB)
The scientific team visited more than a dozen archaeological sites in North America, where they found high concentrations of iridium, an element that is rare on Earth, and is almost exclusively associated with extraterrestrial objects such as comets and meteorites.

They also found metallic microspherules in the comet fragments; these microspherules contained nano-diamonds. The comet also carried carbon molecules called fullerenes (buckyballs), with gases trapped inside that indicated an extraterrestrial origin.

The team concluded that the impact of the comet likely destabilized a large portion of the Laurentide ice sheet, causing a high volume of freshwater to flow into the north Atlantic and Arctic Oceans.

"This, in turn, would have caused a major disruption of the ocean's circulation, leading to a cooler atmosphere and the glaciation of the Younger Dryas period," said Kennett. "We found evidence of the impact as far west as the Santa Barbara Channel Islands."

NSF's Paleoclimate Program funded the research.


About the Author
©2006 All rights reserved

More articles
Carbon dioxide 'tree banking'
Ancient microbes life
Spewing speed along
Experimental ecosystem
Lost forest species
Comet exploded 13,000 years ago
Irrigation globe future
Changes at the earth's core
Earth's plates
Organisms in canadian mine
Prehistoric high
Climate change goes underground
Nasty bacteria need sunlight
toxic air pollution urban parking garages
Earths proximity to sun ice age trigger
Coastal water quality
Volcanoes oxygen atmosphere
Gorillas critically endangered
northern hemisphere ice
Atmospheric moisture
Quotes
If I work incessantly to the last, nature owes me another form of existence when the present one collapses. -- Goethe, 1829

If a few idiots want to risk their necks flying across the country thats fine, but nothing will ever replace trains.


Writers
If you are a writer and want to see your article published at Theallineed.com, just click here to submit.

Info
Today...
In the news...
Economic integration can spur development in Western Asia
Closer economic integration can help the Western Asian region overcome recent conflicts and political tensions and also spur progress towards internationally agreed anti-poverty goals, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said today.
How do you prefer your breakfast eggs?
Sunny side up not easy
Sunny side up easy
Boiled
Poached
Scrambled
Other
 
Things to ponder
The older you get, the better you realize you were.

Did you know...
Walt Disney was afraid of mice.

Quote of the day
The best car safety device is a rear-view mirror with a cop in it.
Dudley Moore

Featured article
Help Hair Grow
Hair gives natural beauty to all person which can improve the appearance, feeling, personality and expression. Shiny hair is a sign of health because the layers of the cuticle lie flat and reflect light.

 
© 2002 - 2007 Lexur