https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/18/science/asteroid-ice-age-dust.html#click=https://t.co/SR1x8D7meJ

How to Cool a Planet With Extraterrestrial Dust
A study of fossil meteorites suggests that a distant asteroid collision
once sent Earth into an ice age.

ImageThe slowly diminishing asteroid 6478 Gault, with a tail more than
500,000 miles long and some 3,000 miles wide. The dust from such objects
may have been a factor in past global cooling on Earth.
The slowly diminishing asteroid 6478 Gault, with a tail more than 500,000
miles long and some 3,000 miles wide. The dust from such objects may have
been a factor in past global cooling on Earth.CreditCreditNASA, via
Associated Press
By Emma Goldberg
Sept. 18, 2019

Extraterrestrial events — the collision of faraway black holes, a comet
slamming into Jupiter — evoke wonder on Earth but rarely a sense of local
urgency. By and large, what happens in outer space stays in outer space.

A study published Wednesday in Science Advances offered a compelling
exception to that rule. A team of researchers led by Birger Schmitz, a
nuclear physicist at Lund University in Sweden, found that a distant,
ancient asteroid collision generated enough dust to cause an ice age long
ago on Earth. The study lends new insight to ongoing efforts to address
climate change.

“We’ve shown that what happens in the solar system can have a big influence
on Earth,” said Philipp Heck, a curator of meteorites at the Field Museum
of Natural History in Chicago and an author of the study. “Extraterrestrial
events aren’t always destructive. Many people think about meteorites as
just dinosaur killers, but we found the opposite. A big collision in the
asteroid belt had constructive consequences that led to cooling and
biodiversification.”

Earth is frequently exposed to extraterrestrial matter; 40,000 tons of the
stuff settle on the planet every year, enough to fill 1,000
tractor-trailers. But 466 million years ago, a 93-mile-wide asteroid
collided with an unknown, fast-moving object between Mars and Jupiter. The
crash increased the amount of dust arriving on Earth for the next two
million years by a factor of 10,000. Dr. Schmitz, Dr. Heck and their team
found that the dust triggered cooling in Earth’s atmosphere that led to an
ice age.

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In sufficient amounts, extraterrestrial dust can cool Earth by blocking the
amount of solar radiation that reaches the surface. Because the dust from
the asteroid collision accumulated gradually, the planet cooled gradually,
allowing plants and animal species to adapt as sea levels dropped and
temperatures declined by as much as 50 degrees Fahrenheit.

“Our study is the first time it has been shown that asteroid dust actually
helps cool Earth to a dramatic extent,” Dr. Schmitz said.

ImageA piece of limestone with fossilized meteorite and nautiloid shell
from the mid-Ordovician period, recovered from Kinnekulle, in southern
Sweden.
A piece of limestone with fossilized meteorite and nautiloid shell from the
mid-Ordovician period, recovered from Kinnekulle, in southern
Sweden.CreditBirger Schmitz
The team derived their evidence from a study of fossil meteorites,
extraterrestrial materials that long ago became embedded in Earth’s rocks.
They are so rare, Dr. Heck calls them “Mona Lisas.”

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The first was found in a Swedish limestone quarry in 1952, but it was
shelved by an unsuspecting paleontologist and wasn’t properly identified
for another 27 years. In 1979, when a mineralogist realized the
extraterrestrial origins of the rock, he prompted a systematic search for
more in Swedish quarries. Researchers found 130 meteorites over the next
two decades.

Of these, Dr. Schmitz and his team determined that 129 derived from the
same asteroid breakup. The meteorites were analyzed to determine their
chemical composition, and their level of cosmic ray exposure was measured
to confirm their outer-space origins and pin down when they arrived on
Earth.

By tracing the increase in the meteorites of certain isotopes, the
researchers were able to determine that extraterrestrial dust began to
reach Earth about 50,000 years after the asteroid collision. A worldwide
ice age began roughly 10,000 years later, during the Ordovician Period.

“We’re talking about gentle changes that happened over 2 million years,”
Dr. Heck said. “If we could travel back in time, it wouldn’t appear as a
catastrophe to us, it would be more like a gentle nudge that led to global
change and triggered diversification.”

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When the team started its research, they hypothesized that the collision
might have increased dust levels by a hundredfold. The chemical analysis
soon revealed that the dust levels had risen far more, by a factor of
10,000, an increase sufficient to markedly alter Earth’s climate.

Dr. Schmitz and his team believe their findings shed light on a mechanism
that could eventually be used to counteract global warming. In their paper,
they propose that an asteroid could be captured and brought to one of the
Lagrange points between the sun and Earth — an unstable zone where the
gravitational pull of each is equal — allowing it to produce dust that
blocks sunlight. They are not the first scientists to suggest using
extraterrestrial dust for global cooling.

However, Dr. Heck emphasized that their findings are only a basis for
investigation. “Putting a rock into an unstable point that could make it
fall into Earth has me worried,” he said. “A small asteroid wouldn’t cause
a global extinction, but it could cause a local catastrophe or wipe out a
city in the worst case.”

At the very least, Dr. Schmitz said, the study will help people appreciate
Earth’s connection to the rest of the solar system: “Geologists often think
of nothing outside Earth. You have to understand what happens in space to
get the full picture of what’s happened on Earth.”

Earlier reporting on dust from outer space
Flecks of Extraterrestrial Dust, All Over the RoofMarch 10, 2017

How Moon Dust Languished in a Downing Street CupboardJan. 31, 2016


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