An astonishing new scientific paper suggests that dark matter could have 
triggered not just the extinction of the dinosaurs, but also all the other mass 
extinctions on our planet too.

Publishing in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Michael 
Rampino, a geoscientist at New York University in the US, explains that mass 
extinctions occur roughly ever 26 million to 30 million years on Earth - around 
the same time our Solar System passes through the disc of the Milky Way. 

This cycle in the range of 26–30 million years has been widely reported 
regarding mass extinctions. But also, terrestrial impact cratering (comet 
impacts) have been found to exhibit a similar cycle of 31 ± 5 million years. 
Thirdly, there is also a similar 30 million year periodicity observed in 
terrestrial geologic (eg volcanic, earthquake etc) activity, and, which may 
also be involved in the above-mentioned extinctions. 

Finally, the Sun's vertical oscillations through the plane of our galaxy's disc 
have also been estimated to take from 30 to 42 million years between each earth 
Galactic plane crossing.

That is, as the Sun follows the swirling motion of the Galaxy's arms in 
circling around the galactic centre, the Sun also moves up and down, 
periodically crossing the plane that cuts the Galaxy into a top and a bottom 
half. This new research suggests that as the Sun oscillates up and down,  it 
crosses a denser layer of dark matter causing a gravitational push and pull 
that disturbs comets in the Oort cloud. Hence, a thin disk of dark matter at 
the centre of the Galaxy could be causing the comet storms on earth with a 
periodicity of about 35 million years.

Thus, finally, these four observations taken together suggest that these cycles 
of geological and biological evolution on Earth may be partly controlled by 
dark matter and the rhythms of Galactic dynamics. 


Here's the Scientific Abstract for this new research:

"Disc dark matter in the Galaxy and potential cycles of extraterrestrial 
impacts, mass extinctions and geological events"

http://mnras.oxfordjournals.org/content/448/2/1816

    By Michael R. Rampino

    Author Affiliations
    1 Department of Biology, New York University, New York, NY 10003, USA
    2 Department of Environmental Studies, New York University, New York, NY 
10003, USA
    3 NASA, Goddard Institute for Space Studies, 2880 Broadway, New York, NY 
10025, USA

    Author E-mail: [email protected]

    Accepted 2014 December 30.
    Received 2014 December 29.
    First published online February 18, 2015.

Abstract

A cycle in the range of 26–30 Myr has been reported in mass extinctions, and 
terrestrial impact cratering may exhibit a similar cycle of 31 ± 5 Myr. These 
cycles have been attributed to the Sun's vertical oscillations through the 
Galactic disc, estimated to take from 30 to 42 Myr between Galactic plane 
crossings. Near the Galactic mid-plane, the Solar system's Oort Cloud comets 
could be perturbed by Galactic tidal forces, and possibly a thin dark matter 
(DM) disc, which might produce periodic comet showers and extinctions on the 
Earth. Passage of the Earth through especially dense clumps of DM, composed of 
Weakly Interacting Massive Particles (WIMPs) in the Galactic plane, could also 
lead to heating in the core of the planet through capture and subsequent 
annihilation of DM particles. This new source of periodic heating in the 
Earth's interior might explain a similar 30 Myr periodicity observed in 
terrestrial geologic activity, which may also be involved in extinctions. These 
results suggest that cycles of geological and biological evolution on the Earth 
may be partly controlled by the rhythms of Galactic dynamics. 


See also:
http://www.nature.com/news/did-dark-matter-kill-the-dinosaurs-1.14839
http://www.sciencealert.com/new-hypothesis-suggests-dark-matter-wiped-out-the-dinosaurs

Cheers,
Stephen


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