Here's a photo to go with the story:

http://meteoritestudies.com/KTFOSSIL.JPG

David

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Sky & Telescope, March 1999, p. 22: Piece of a Killer Asteroid ?

Like finding a stray bullet at a crime scene, a researcher believes he has 
uncovered
a long-sought chunk of the impactor thought to have snuffed out 70 percent of 
the
species of life on Earth 65 million years ago. Scientists found the "smoking 
gun" in
1990: a 180-kilometer-wide circular structure centered beneath the town of 
Puerto
Chicxulub on the coast of Mexico's Yucatán Peninsula. But no piece of the 
impactor
had surfaced.
Geochemist Frank T. Kyte (University of California, Los Angeles) has been 
studying
a core sample from the bottom of the Pacific Ocean containing dark clay marking 
the
boundary of the Cretaceous and Tertiary periods (the K-T boundary). As Kyte
describes in Nature for November 19, 1998, the clay layer included a 
4-millimeter-wide
piece of lighter-colored clay. Upon splitting open the nugget, he discovered a 
fossil
meteorite. More detailed examination of this sedimentary pearl revealed that it 
contains
high concentrations of iron oxides, principally hematite.
While the mineralogy of the fossil meteorite has undoubtedly changed over time, 
Kyte
reports that the amounts of iron, chromium, and iridium are nevertheless close 
to the
ranges seen in carbonaceous chondrites, a common meteorite type. Yet the 
specimen
has one significant compositional oddity: it has 1,000 times more gold than 
chondritic
meteorites commonly have, a curiosity that Kyte finds puzzling.
Because the ocean-floor sediments at the K-T boundary accumulated over perhaps 
as
much as 500,000 years, there is no way to prove that this truly is a piece of 
the
K-T impactor. However, a meteoritic impact is most consistent with Kyte's 
analysis;
he largely discounts the possibilities that the material is interplanetary dust 
or
cometary debris. Moreover, he thinks it quite conceivable that a piece of the 
asteroid
that struck the Yucatán Peninsula survived the blast and landed 9,000 
kilometers away.

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