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It's official: An asteroid wiped out the dinosaurs

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By Kate Kelland, Health and Science Correspondent – Thu Mar 4, 2:07 pm ET

LONDON (Reuters) – A giant asteroid smashing into Earth is the only plausible explanation for the extinction of the dinosaurs, a global scientific team said on Thursday, hoping to settle a row that has divided experts for decades.

A panel of 41 scientists from across the world reviewed 20 years' worth of research to try to confirm the cause of the so-called Cretaceous-Tertiary (KT) extinction, which created a "hellish environment" around 65 million years ago and wiped out more than half of all species on the planet.

Scientific opinion was split over whether the extinction was caused by an asteroid or by volcanic activity in the Deccan Traps in what is now India, where there were a series of super volcanic eruptions that lasted around 1.5 million years.

The new study, conducted by scientists from Europe, the United States, Mexico, Canada and Japan and published in the journal Science, found that a 15-kilometre (9 miles) wide asteroid slamming into Earth at Chicxulub in what is now Mexico was the culprit.

"We now have great confidence that an asteroid was the cause of the KT extinction. This triggered large-scale fires, earthquakes measuring more than 10 on the Richter scale, and continental landslides, which created tsunamis," said Joanna Morgan of Imperial College London, a co-author of the review.

The asteroid is thought to have hit Earth with a force a billion times more powerful than the atomic bomb at Hiroshima.

Morgan said the "final nail in the coffin for the dinosaurs" came when blasted material flew into the atmosphere, shrouding the planet in darkness, causing a global winter and "killing off many species that couldn't adapt to this hellish environment."

Scientists working on the study analyzed the work of paleontologists, geochemists, climate modelers, geophysicists and sedimentologists who have been collecting evidence about the KT extinction over the last 20 years.

Geological records show the event that triggered the dinosaurs' demise rapidly destroyed marine and land ecosystems, they said, and the asteroid hit "is the only plausible explanation for this."

Peter Schulte of the University of Erlangen in Germany, a lead author on the study, said fossil records clearly show a mass extinction about 65.5 million years ago -- a time now known as the K-Pg boundary.

Despite evidence of active volcanism in India, marine and land ecosystems only showed minor changes in the 500,000 years before the K-Pg boundary, suggesting the extinction did not come earlier and was not prompted by eruptions.

The Deccan volcano theory is also thrown into doubt by models of atmospheric chemistry, the team said, which show the asteroid impact would have released much larger amounts of sulphur, dust and soot in a much shorter time than the volcanic eruptions could have, causing extreme darkening and cooling.

Gareth Collins, another co-author from Imperial College, said the asteroid impact created a "hellish day" that signaled the end of the 160-million-year reign of the dinosaurs, but also turned out to be a great day for mammals.

"The KT extinction was a pivotal moment in Earth's history, which ultimately paved the way for humans to become the dominant species on Earth," he wrote in a commentary on the study.
(Collins has created a website at Chicxulub Impact Effects which allows readers to see the effects of the asteroid impact.)
(Editing by Myra MacDonald)


It's official: An asteroid wiped out the dinosaurs - Yahoo! News
 
I read that earlier...

kinda fuckin crazy if you think about it. how much life on earth died in that 1 moment and the years following. we don't even register that because we didn't exist
 
If that figure about it creating a force a billion times greater than an atomic bomb then I can see why barely anything survived. Still though it'd be cool to see giant T-Rex's and Triceratops battling out in the woods, I kinda wish they'd have made it.
 
Small potatoes to the asteoid that killed something like 97% of all life on earth about a billion years prior.
 
I'm wondering when we will stop using "the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima" as the benchmark for like everything in the multiverse.
 
I just stubbed my toe with .00000148 the force of the bomb that was dropped on that fat chick that one time outside Nagasaki
 
It would have been cool as shit to be in a plane 30,000 feet up when an asteroid hits...landing might have sucked though.
 
My farts are roughly .00000296 the force of hiroshima, or twice the force of RW stubbed two.
 
I'm wondering when we will stop using "the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima" as the benchmark for like everything in the multiverse.

Then what benchmark are we supposed to use? That insofar as we know is the largest man v man explosion ever set off. Also due to the immense amount of study put forth to describe the bombing the imperical data lends itself to benchmark status.

75th you mean the Permian extinction.

Cheers,
Scotsman
 
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