Berikut ada berita sains menarik, dikutip dari AFP dan Yahoo news. Sekelompok 
ilmuwan baru saja mengumumkan penemuan mereka (2 Juni 2006). 
   
  Sebuah kawah meteorit selebar hampir 500 km ditemukan di Antarktika sebelah 
timur. Mereka memperkirakan ukuran meteorit ini 4-5 kali lebih besar daripada 
meteorit pemusnah dinosaurus di K-T boundary. Berdasarkan dating, meteorit ini 
membentur Bumi pada batas Paleozoikum-Mesozoikum, Perem-Trias. Ini adalah 
periode kepunahan masal paling besar dalam sejarah Bumi. Meteorit ini juga 
kemudian diduga telah mempengaruhi pemisahan Australia dari Gondwana pada 
Yura-Kapur.
   
  Meteor mega-hit spawned Australian continent
   
  A meteor's roaring crash into Antarctica -- larger and earlier than the 
impact that killed the dinosaurs -- caused the biggest mass extinction in 
Earth's history and likely spawned the Australian continent, scientists said.
   
  Ohio State University scientists said the 483-kilometer-wide (300-mile-wide) 
crater is now hidden more than 1.6 kilometers (one mile) beneath the East 
Antarctic Ice Sheet.
   
  "Gravity measurements that reveal its existence suggest that it could date 
back about 250 million years -- the time of the Permian-Triassic extinction, 
when almost all animal life on Earth died out," the university said in a 
statement Thursday.
   
  "Its size and location -- in the Wilkes Land region of East Antarctica, south 
of Australia -- also suggest that it could have begun the breakup of the 
Gondwana supercontinent by creating the tectonic rift that pushed Australia 
northward," they added.
   
  Scientists believe that the Permian-Triassic extinction paved the way for the 
dinosaurs to rise to prominence.
   
  The Wilkes Land crater is more than twice the size of the Chicxulub crater in 
Mexico's Yucatan peninsula, which marks the impact that may have ultimately 
killed the dinosaurs 65 million years ago.
   
  The Chicxulub meteor is thought to have been 9.6 kilometers (six miles) wide, 
while the Wilkes Land meteor could have been up to 48.3 kilometers (30 miles) 
wide -- four or five times wider.
   
  "This Wilkes Land impact is much bigger than the impact that killed the 
dinosaurs, and probably would have caused catastrophic damage at the time," 
said Ralph von Frese, a professor of geological sciences at Ohio State.
   
  He and Laramie Potts, a postdoctoral researcher in geological sciences, led 
the team that discovered the crater. They collaborated with other Ohio State 
and NASA scientists, as well as partners from Russia and South Korea. They 
reported their preliminary results in a recent American Geophysical Union Joint 
Assembly meeting in Baltimore, Maryland.
   
  Some 100 million years ago, Australia split from the ancient Gondwana 
supercontinent and began drifting north, pushed away by expansion of a rift 
valley into the eastern Indian Ocean. The rift cuts directly through the 
crater, so the impact may have helped the rift to form, von Frese said.
   
  The more immediate effects of the impact, however, would have devastated life 
on Earth.
   
  "All the environmental changes that would have resulted from the impact would 
have created a highly caustic environment that was really hard to endure. So it 
makes sense that a lot of life went extinct at that time," he said.
   
  Collaborators included Stuart Wells and Orlando Hernandez, graduate students 
in geological sciences at Ohio State; Luis Gaya-Pique and Hyung Rae Kim, both 
of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center; Alexander Golynsky of the All-Russia 
Research Institute for Geology and Mineral Resources of the World Ocean; and 
Jeong Woo Kim and Jong Sun Hwang, both of Sejong University in South Korea.
   
  Copyright © 2006 Agence France Presse. All rights reserved.  
  Copyright © 2006 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
   
  salam,
  awang

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