Did A Comet Kill The Dinosaurs?

Friday, March 22, 2013 - 14:30 in Astronomy & Space

Big Boom A giant bolide creates the Chicxulub crater in what is now known as the Yucatan peninsula. Donald E. Davis, WikipediaNew data seems to suggest that one did. Some 66 million years ago, a giant space object of some kind slammed into Earth right around the Yucatan peninsula. The resultant explosion sent debris high into the atmosphere; the dust resettled to earth newly enriched with the elements iridium and osmium--elements that are much more abundant in space than on Earth--and formed a thin layer in the rock strata now called the K-Pg boundary. A side effect of this violent impact was the extinction of most of the megafauna--dinosaurs, etc--living during that time. The impact site itself was discovered in 1978 by a geologist working for an oil company, but it wasn't until 1990 that the now-named Chicxulub crater was associated with the proposed impact that caused the mass extinctions....

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