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November 20, 2003

New Evidence that Earth's Greatest Extinction Caused by Ancient Meteorite or Comet

Long before the dinosaurs ever lived, the planet experienced a mass extinction 
so severe it killed 90 percent of life on Earth, and researchers at the 
University of Rochester think they've identified the unlikely culprit.

"An ancient meteorite body, one from the days when the solar system was still 
forming, struck the Earth 251 million years ago," says Asish Basu, professor of 
earth sciences in today's issue of Science. The research is the latest volley in 
a decades-long debate over what caused "The Great Dying," the greatest 
elimination of life in the planet's history.

While scientists have been wrangling over whether a meteor caused this great 
extinction ever since a meteor was fingered with the blame for the later 
dinosaur extinction, these new findings add weight to the argument that a major 
meteorite did strike the Earth 251 million years ago, likely triggering climate 
change and unprecedented volcanic activity. That one-two punch so affected the 
composition of the atmosphere that it took thousands of years to recover -- 
leaving only a relative handful of plants and animals alive.

Two decades ago, Nobel laureate Luis Alvarez and his son, Walter, detected huge 
concentrations of iridium throughout the world in rock dated to the end of the 
dinosaur era. Iridium is only found in such concentrations in asteroids, so they 
concluded that a giant asteroid had struck the Earth at that time, likely 
leading to the downfall of the dinosaurs. The Alvarez claims were at first 
largely dismissed, but the evidence grew and today it is accepted that their 
interpretation was largely correct.

Basu added weight to the Alvarez claims in 1988 when he announced the discovery 
of "shocked quartz" -- special crystals that have split along certain planes 
indicative of a large impact -- immediately beneath the Deccan Traps of India. 
The Deccan Traps are areas of huge volcanic deposits that have been dated to 65 
million years ago, the time of the dinosaur extinction, so finding shocked 
quartz immediately beneath them suggests that a giant impact preceded these 
giant lava flows.

While a meteorite has been largely accepted as the source of the dinosaurs' 
demise, the root of The Great Dying has been a mystery. In 1991, however, Basu 
published a study in Science that showed a massive and ancient lava flow in 
Siberia dated precisely to that greatest of extinctions 251 million years ago. 
The lava did not shoot out of the Earth like a giant volcano, but oozed molten 
rock for thousands of years -- so much lava, in fact, that if spread evenly, it 
would bury the surface of the Earth under 10 feet of magma.

Further testing by Basu and Robert Poreda, professor of earth and environmental 
sciences at the University, and also co-author of the current Science research, 
showed that both the Siberian and Indian lava had come from as deep as 1,800 
miles beneath the surface.

"These were not just examples of local magma bubbling through the crust," 
explains Poreda. "Something brought this lava all the way up from near the 
Earth's core."

To find what might have caused the Siberian flows meant finding rock samples 251 
million years old-not an easy prospect since oceanic tectonic plates that make 
up 70 percent of the Earth's surface are younger than that. Oceanic plates slide 
underneath continental plates as they move, thus carrying any evidence far 
beyond the reach of humans. From an area in Antarctica called Graphite Peak, 
Basu and Poreda took rock from a stratum that sat between a layer that contained 
many fossils and a layer nearly devoid of fossils called the Permian/Triassic, 
or P/T boundary. One of the fossils that had gone from prominence to sudden 
disappearance was Glossopteris flora, a plant that was widely known to have been 
wiped out in The Great Dying. This reassured the team that they had the right 
rock from the right period. Previous tests by Poreda on this same layer found 
shocked quartz and fullerenes, cage-like molecules, containing atoms of 
extraterrestrial gases, which again hinted at a meteorite or comet strike. These 
results, however, were disputed by some researchers.

Coming at the problem from another angle, Basu and Poreda separated out the 
magnetic particles from the samples from Graphite Peak and from a source of P/T 
strata in Meishan, China, and Japan. To their surprise they found that the 
grains that sorted out contained an iron alloy that does not occur on Earth. 
Some 40 pieces were tiny fragments of meteorite 4.56 billion years old, while 
other grains displayed metallic characteristics that were more indicative of 
being formed by extreme heat, such as that in a severe meteorite impact. The 
very fact that these grains had not deteriorated from weathering means they must 
have been buried quickly under sedimentary deposits, again, indicative of a 
major impact.

"At the end of the Permian era, Antarctica was close to its present position as 
the southernmost part of the ancient supercontinent, Pangea, while south China 
was at the equator and Japan was to the north of the equator," explains Basu. 
"Such a wide, global distribution of these metal grains in the P/T boundary 
strongly suggests that these grains mark a major impact of a celestial body at 
that time."

Critics of the P/T impact theory may point to the lack of iridium, the element 
that is so rare on Earth but common in asteroids and which alerted Alvarez to 
the possibility of a meteorite as the death knell for the dinosaurs. The 
Rochester team's work shows strong evidence that not all collisions with 
extraterrestrial bodies will leave an iridium footprint. Basu suggests that a 
collision with a comet, which may have a meteoric core, would be low in iridium. 
Thus the culprit that wiped out nine of every 10 creatures on the Earth and 
nearly ended life when it was just taking hold may have been created before the 
Earth itself was fully formed.

Basu and Poreda plan to continue searching for evidence of a catastrophic impact 
in the P/T layer in different sites around the world. They hope that if enough 
samples from enough locations show evidence of a major impact, then scientists 
will be able to construct the exact scenarios of how the two largest mass 
extinctions in history were caused by meteorite collisions.

Along with Basu and Poreda, the co-authors of the paper are Michail I. Petaev 
and Stein B. Jacobsen of Harvard University, and Luann Becker of the University 
of California, Santa Barbara.





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