In the July 16 2021 issue of the journal Science evidence is reported that
2.5 million years ago a supernova occurred between 160 and 320 light years
from the Earth, and another rather more distant one occurred 6.3 million
years ago. By way of comparison Betelgeuse is 642 light years away.
Although it would've been much brighter than the full moon, that ancient
supernova was not close enough to cause a mass extinction, but it would
have had a noticeable effect on the environment. The  x-rays and gamma rays
probably wouldn't have had a major effect but the charged particles emitted
by the supernova that would've arrived about 500 years after the light may
have. The ozone layer would be depleted by at least 7%, and the amount of
ionization in the upper atmosphere would've increased by a factor of 10 and
increase the production of nitrogen oxide compounds by 30%.

This increase in the production of nitrogen compounds  would continue for
at least 5000 years, and these compounds would combine with water and fall
to the earth as rain and act as an excellent fertilizer that would increase
plant growth and so reduce the amount of carbon dioxide in the air and
decrease greenhouse warming. It may have been the cause of the Pleistocene
cooling known to have occurred 2.5 million years ago. Also, when charged
particles from the supernova hit the upper atmosphere they would produce a
heavier version of the electron called a *"muon*" which would be able to
reach the earth surface and even into the ocean to a depth of one kilometer
which would triple the normal radiation level and possibly increase the
cancer and mutation rate.

The isotope iron-60 has been found in sediments dredged up from the
northern Pacific, it can only be manufactured in the cores of very massive
stars and it has a half-life of only 2.6 million years and decays into
nickel-60. By finding the ratio of these two elements in sediments dredged
up from the northern Pacific scientists determined that the iron-60 must've
arrived on the earth 2.5 million years ago. Iron-60 has even been found in
dust from the moon brought back by Apollo missions. They also found
Plutonium-244 in those ocean sediments and it  has a half-life of 80
million years and decays into uranium 236. The plutonium uranium ratio is
consistent with the 2.6 million year age obtained by the iron nickel ratio.

By using the incredibly precise data about the position and velocity of
nearby stars obtained by the Hipparcos satellite, it was determined that
2.5 million years ago there was a rather dense clump of large stars called
the "*Scorpius-Centaurus OB Association*"  less than 300 light years from
the earth.  Today that clump contains 79 stars that are large enough to
someday end their life as a core collapse supernova, based on that it is
statistically estimated that in the last 13 million years about a dozen
former members of that clump did indeed end their lives in a supernova.
Today that clump of stars is moving away from us.

Statistically speaking, a few supernovas must've exploded less than 30
light years from Earth sometime during its 4.5 billion year history. It has
been hypothesized that a major mass extinction at the end of the Devonian
period 359 million years ago was caused by a supernova that was 60 light
years away or less.

A nearby supernova 2.5 million years ago
<https://science.sciencemag.org/content/373/6552/269>

John K Clark

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