I am become Death, destroyer of worlds

Thanks to Ivan for the link.
http://www.economist.com/sciencetechnology/displayStory.cfm?story_id=14698363

EVERYONE knows that the dinosaurs were exterminated when an asteroid hit what is now Mexico about 65m years ago. The crater is there. It is 180km (110 miles) in diameter. It was formed in a 100m-megatonne explosion by an object about 10km across. The ejecta from the impact are found all over the world. The potassium-argon radioactive dating method shows the crater was created within a gnat’s whisker of the extinction. Calculations suggest that the “nuclear winter” from the impact would have lasted years. Plants would have stopped photosynthesising. Animals would have starved to death. Case closed.

Well, it now seems possible that everyone was wrong. The Chicxulub crater, as it is known, may have been a mere aperitif. According to Sankar Chatterjee of Texas Tech University, the main course was served later. Dr Chatterjee has found a bigger crater—much bigger—in India. His is 500km across. The explosion that caused it may have been 100 times the size of the one that created Chicxulub. He calls it Shiva, after the Indian deity of destruction.

Dr Chatterjee presented his latest findings on Shiva to the annual meeting of the Geological Society of America in Portland, Oregon, on October 18th. He makes a compelling case, identifying an underwater mountain called Bombay High, off the coast of Mumbai, that formed right at the time of the dinosaur extinction. This mountain measures five kilometres from sea bed to peak, and is surrounded by Shiva’s crater rim. Dr Chatterjee’s analysis shows that it formed from a sudden upwelling of magma that destroyed the Earth’s crust in the area and pushed the mountain upwards in a hurry. He argues that no force other than the rebound from an impact could have produced this kind of vertical uplift so quickly. And the blow that caused it would surely have been powerful enough to smash ecosystems around the world.
...
Continue reading
http://www.economist.com/sciencetechnology/displayStory.cfm?story_id=14698363

TAGGED: EVOLUTION, PALEONTOLOGY


RELATED CONTENT

Symbolism and Social Exchange Leads to...

Daniel Baril - Past Horizons 23 Comments

The disappearance of Neanderthals still remains a mystery, but paleoanthropologists are increasingly understanding what allowed their evolutionary cousins, Homo sapiens, to conquer the planet.

Monster-Sized Rabbits Discovered;...

Robert Krulwich - npr 28 Comments

Monster-Sized Rabbits Discovered; Sadly, They Can't Hop

Human fossils hint at new species

Johnathan - BBC 21 Comments

The remains of what may be a previously unknown human species have been identified in southern China.

Oldest Organism With Skeleton...

- - ScienceDaily 6 Comments

The best Coronacollina specimens showing the main body with articulated spicules. Specimens originate from different field localities. Arrows indicate main body of Coronacollina. White/black bars indicate 1 cm. A, C, D and E are photographs of fossil impressions in the rock. B and F are latex casts showing how the fossils would have looked in life, after compression. (Credit: Droser lab, UC Riverside.)

New evidence suggests Stone Age hunters...

David Keys - The Independent 70 Comments

New archaeological evidence suggests that America was first discovered by Stone Age people from Europe – 10,000 years before the Siberian-originating ancestors of the American Indians set foot in the New World.

Lost Charles Darwin fossils...

- - BBC News - Science & Environment 10 Comments

A "treasure trove" of fossils - including some collected by Charles Darwin - has been re-discovered in an old cabinet.

MORE

Comments

Comment RSS Feed

Please sign in or register to comment