http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/5045024.stm


What appears to be a 480km-wide (300 miles) crater has been detected 
under the East Antarctic Ice Sheet.
The scientists behind the discovery say it could have been made by a 
massive meteorite strike 250 million years ago.

The feature at Wilkes Land was found by Nasa satellites that are 
mapping subtle differences in the Earth's gravity.

"This Wilkes Land impact is much bigger than the impact that killed 
the dinosaurs," said Prof Ralph von Frese, from Ohio State University, 
in the US.

If the crater really was formed at the time von Frese and colleagues 
believe, it will raise interest as a possible cause of the "great 
dying" - the biggest of all the Earth's mass extinctions when 95% of 
all marine life and 70% of all land species disappeared.

Some scientists have long suspected that the extinction at the 
boundary of the Permian and Triassic (PT) Periods could have occurred 
quite abruptly - the result of environmental changes brought on by the 
impact of a giant space rock.

It is a similar argument to the one put forward to explain the demise 
of the dinosaurs at the much later date of 65 million years ago.

A geological structure, known as the Bedout High, in the seabed off 
what is now Australia, has also been suggested as the possible crater 
remains from the PT impactor.

But the impact explanation for the great dying is an argument that has 
struggled to find favour.

The prevailing theory is that several factors - including 
supervolcanism and extensive climate warming - combined over thousands 
of years to strangle the planet's biodiversity.

Earth may well have been hit by extraterrestrial objects, but it is 
unlikely there was some killer punch from space, these other 
researchers contend.

The Ohio-led team used gravity fluctuations measured by the US space 
agency's Grace satellites to peer beneath Antarctica's icy surface. 
Team members were drawn from the US, Russia and Korea.

The crater information was first presented at the recent American 
Geophysical Union Joint Assembly in Baltimore.




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