[meteorite-list] Re: Crackpot impact theory
From: Marco Langbroek <marco.langbroek_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Sun Sep 25 07:20:40 2005 Message-ID: <43368806.5030803_at_wanadoo.nl> Two things in particular, plus a few others, made me frown about this hypothesis. One is the "comet coalesced from supernova material". That's just not the current idea of how comets formed. So I do hope that Firestone in his paper provides a scientificaly viable mechanism for this alternative comet formation theory, otherwise it is crackpot. The other point is, that mammoths did *not* get extinct all at once at ~13 000 BP. On Wrangel Island in the arctic for example, they survived untill 4000 BP. In Eurasia, they disappear between ~15000 and 12000 bp, in what seems to be a gradual process. Also, why the mammoths, but for example not the bears and bizons? Are bears and bizons immune to comet impact? The extinction of part of the megafauna at the end of the Weichsel/Wisconsin glacial is *not* akin to the mass extinctions of life such as at the K/T boundary (and it is not abrupt). And its not restricted to North Amerca, which seems the focus of this new hypothesis if the press release is correct ("comet impact in North America"). And where's the crater? We are talking here, of a comet the size of the K/T impactor (10 km). That leaves one giant crater, Chixculub sized. These are just some legitimite questions based on scientific data we have, regarding this hypothesis. Since I have never been a fan of the "human hunting overkill hypothesis" either (another alternative hypothesis), my cards are still on the changes in environment happening at the end of the last glacial. Note by the way, that a viable mechanism for peaks and lows in atmospheric radiocarbon, is in solar activity. Hence, a supernova certainly is not "the only" phenomena that explains it. In fact, current research suggests there are several cycles in atmospheric 14C levels over time, which implicates cycles in solar activity (the 11 year cycle is well know, but there are several longer cyces too, it appears). - Marco (Pleistocene archaeologist) ----- Dr Marco Langbroek Dutch Meteor Society (DMS) e-mail: meteorites_at_dmsweb.org private website http://home.wanadoo.nl/marco.langbroek DMS website http://www.dmsweb.org ----- Received on Sun 25 Sep 2005 07:20:38 AM PDT |
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