http://www.earthinstitute.columbia.edu/news/2003/story01-17-03.html

Earth Institute at Columbia University
January 17, 2003

Contact:
Mary Tobin
845-365-8607

Columbia University Research Finds Correlation Between Meteorite and Comet
Impacts and an Increase in Volcanic Activity Development

10 Major Episodes of Extraterrestrial Impacts Found to Correlate with 9 
Major Episodes of Volcanism

Supporting the theory that catastrophic events significantly influence major 
Earth processes, researchers have determined that comet and meteorite impacts on
Earth occurring over the last 4 billion years have directly correlated with the 
activity of strong and normal mantle plumes - heated mantle rock causing
volcanic eruptions (e.g. Hawaii, Iceland). 

Dr. Dallas Abbott, of the Lamont-Doherty Earth Institute, and Ann Isley, of SUNY 
Oswego, assembled an expanded database of terrestrial impacts over the last 4 
billion years. They used clues from known craters such as impact spherules created
from impact melt, and from impact breccias that are created from shattered debris 
fused under high temperatures and pressures. They also examined the activity of 
normal and strong mantle plumes over geological time. Time series derived from 
this data showed that 10 major peaks in terrestrial impact activity were seen on 
Earth over this time period. Nine out of 10 of these impact peaks are directly 
matched by peaks in normal to strong mantle plume volcanism. In addition, there 
are two prominent lulls in impact activity, also corresponding to periods of lower
activity of mantle plume volcanism. 

The biggest mystery remaining is the mechanism by which large impacts might intensify
volcanism. Abbott and Isley propose three possibilities: impacts may cause cracking 
and de-stressing of the crust, allowing melts that had been trapped due to tectonic 
stress and/or impermeable boundaries to rise more easily to the surface; impacts may 
produce large cracks in the surface of the Earth allowing new plate boundaries to form 
with consequent thinner lithosphere and longer melt columns; or impacts may produce 
microdikes at the core mantle boundary, which, if very thin, would allow molten core 
and mantle material to mix, increasing the amount of heat available for melting the 
mantle and producing a rapid intensification of existing mantle plumes.

Another question raised by the correlation between impacts and volcanism concerns 
widely adopted theories that meteorite and comet impacts were the cause of mass 
extinctions of life on Earth. Was it the impact alone or could major episodes of 
mantle plume volcanism have contributed to these extinctions? 

Dallas Abbott is an adjunct research scientist at The Lamont-Doherty Earth 
Observatory. Her primary research focus is the thermal history of the earth, and 
the manner in which heat transport through the crust and upper mantle influences 
geological processes, both ancient and present-day.

Abbott and Isley"s research paper, "Extraterrestrial Influences on Mantle Plume 
Activity," is appearing in Earth and Planetary Science Letters this month. 

The Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, a research unit of the Earth Institute, is 
one of the world"s leading research centers examining the planet from its core to 
its atmosphere, across every continent and every ocean. From global climate change 
to earthquakes, volcanoes, environmental hazards and beyond, Observatory scientists 
continue to provide the basic knowledge of Earth systems that must inform the 
future health and habitability of our planet. 

The Earth Institute at Columbia University is the world"s pioneer academic center 
for mobilizing the sciences and public policy in pursuit of a sustainable future, 
especially for the world's poor.  Its director is international economist Jeffrey 
D. Sachs. More than 800 scientists with strength in Earth science, ecology, health, 
social science or engineering are working together to reduce poverty, hunger, disease 
and environmental degradation. The Institute brings their creative knowledge to bear 
through teaching, research and outreach in dozens of countries around the world. In 
all it does, the Earth Institute remains mindful of the staggering disparities between
rich and poor nations and the tremendous impact that global-scale problems -- from the 
AIDS pandemic to climate change to extreme poverty in much of the developing world -- 
will have on all nations.
 

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