[meteorite-list] Asteroid Impact Evidence Found in Cuba
From: Ron Baalke <baalke_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Mon Jun 20 18:25:45 2005 Message-ID: <200506202225.j5KMP1b28724_at_zagami.jpl.nasa.gov> http://www.periodico26.cu/english_new/features/meteorite200605.htm The Meteorite that Killed the Dinosaurs By Ricardo Potts Periodico 26 (Cuba) The catastrophe that wiped out those reptiles and many other species 60 million years ago has been clarified. The meteorite that caused their deaths left its largest evidence in Cuba. Today it seems to be definitely accepted, said Dr. Manuel Iturralde to Sol y Son. Dr. Iturralde, a specialist with Cuba's National Museum of Natural History, explained that the massive extinction 65 millions years ago in which dinosaurs disappeared was caused by the meteorite of Chixculub, Mexico. The hypothesis of the "killer meteorite" emerged in 1979 when physicists Harold Urey and Luis Alvarez found abnormal concentrations of iridium in sediments from the late Cretaceous period Iridium is rare on Earth, but there is plenty of it in asteroids and it is thought that the impact of one with a diameter of over six miles induced earthquakes, volcanic eruptions and a "nuclear winter" with a sudden drop in temperature. Such an impact would make a crater with a 150 mile diameter. Since none like that was found on land, they looked for it at sea. In 1990, Bohor and Seitz, two US geophysicists, discovered that 650 thousand centuries ago a giant meteorite fell in Chixculub, in the Yucatan peninsula, Mexico, near the south-western coast of Cuba. The evidence should be in the geological strata of the late Cretaceous or early Tertiary periods, (K-T layer, according to experts), for its lower part contains fossils of the disappeared animals, which were not present in the upper part. Also there should be quartz particles crushed by the impact, as well as microtectites, or crystal balls formed when the molten rock solidifies, usually found around meteor craters. And, of course, iridium. Cuban Evidence Iturralde's attention was caught by a paper published in Nature magazine. "I went to the Cuban areas where allegedly were fragments of the impact", he explained, "but the rocks there were not originated by a meteor. Two years later I published a paper on the subject in Earth and Planetary Science and Letters." In 1996 Dr. Takafumi Matsui, from the University of Tokyo, visited Cuba with a project on the Tertiary geological limit and signed a collaboration agreement with the Museum of Natural History and the Institute of Geology and Paleontology. During the past five years several expeditions studied the K-T layer in the provinces of Pinar del R?o, Havana, Matanzas and Villa Clara. Unique cuts were found, for if the deposits in Mexico and other countries of the area are 6 to 10 feet deep, in Cuba they go down to almost three thousand. "They are unique', Iturralde said, "and indicate the most complete vestiges of the impact and its consequences." What produced such unusual thickness? When the meteorite fell in Yucatan, what was then the bottom of the Caribbean and the edge of the peninsula is now what is found in Pinar del Rio, Havana and Matanzas. That is, Cuba has rocks that were part of the bottom of the Caribbean Sea and the Yucatan shores. An Extraterrestrial Earthquake According to Iturralde the impact generated a shock wave with an earthquake way beyond any of terrestrial origin, so great that it provoked an enormous crumbling of the continental edge in Yucatan, the Bahamas platform and the then existing islands, which at present are the foundation of Cuba. The crumbling made deposits hundreds of feet thick, gaps with enormous blocks torn from the near emerging areas. "Gigantic tsunamis crashed on the Caribbean coasts rolling over small islands and low areas, with billions of tons of dust and sand. When they settled, that material when to the bottom of the sea and created the huge layers that we have found," said Iturralde The impact pulverized the meteorite, rocks were fused and flew to the atmosphere, which received that iridium-rich dust, crystals generated by the fusion and cooling of the rock, and also laminar quartz. Due to the impact, all that is on Cuban rocks Prehistoric Nuclear Winter "Most probably all sea organisms in the Caribbean did not survive", said Iturralde. "Not only dinosaurs were extinguished." At the International Congress of Geology held in Havana, Dr. Ryuji Tada, a researcher from the University of Tokyo, said that science links the impact with a world environment crisis - acid rains, fragments falling from the sky and cooling for a long period, because the particles in the atmosphere blocked solar radiation, a kind of "prehistoric nuclear winter." This brought massive deaths that in turn generated plagues, bacteria, fungi and diseases for wildlife and flora, which in turn contributed to the death of more species. The destruction of plants and forests left them without food, the massive fallout and acid rains generated chemical changes in the composition of the water in the seas, rivers and lakes. Many species survived, but also many were totally extinguished, like dinosaurs. At present there is a second project with universities from Spain and Mexico, led by Reinaldo Rojas, the Museum's director, which will study marine life before and after the impact, something that was not done during the previous research. "People sometimes wonder", concluded Iturralde, "why so much money is spent on studying the past when there are so many problems today, but those studies allow us to better know the whys of the present and prepares us for the future. What happened in the past on Earth could happen again, and all that history is in the rocks, so if we study them we'll know what happened, what could happen and how to find ways to be prepared for tomorrow." Received on Mon 20 Jun 2005 06:25:01 PM PDT |
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