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Environment
66-Foot Waves Hit New York in Ancient Asteroid  Splashdown
By _Charles Q. Choi_ (http://www.sciwriter.us/) , LiveScience Contributor 
posted: 26 October 2010 07:33 am ET
A cosmic impact two millennia ago may have  sent tsunamis deluging what is 
now the Big Apple, scientists suggest.  
Many of the giant sea waves known as tsunamis  are caused by underwater 
earthquakes and volcanoes — for example, the  devastating _2004 Indian Ocean 
tsunami_ (http://www.livescience.com/environment/tsunami_special_report.html)  
was triggered by a quake off  the northwestern coast of Sumatra. Still, the 
causes of nearly 10 percent of all  tsunamis nowadays remain uncertain.  
Cosmic impacts have been known to cause  tsunamis in the past. For 
instance, scientists have found evidence that the _Chicxulub impact_ 
(http://www.livescience.com/animals/081215-agu-volcanism-dinosaurs.html)  in 
Mexico, which 
may have ended the  age of dinosaurs, triggered _gigantic_ 
(http://www.livescience.com/environment/asteroid-impact-possibly-caused-prehistoric-nyc-tsunam
i-101025.html#)  waves.
 
Now researchers have evidence suggesting that  an asteroid roughly 200 
yards (183 meters) wide crashed off the coast of New  Jersey and sent tsunamis 
surging toward what is now New York City some 2,300  years ago. [_Video – 
Recreating an Ancient Tsunami_ 
(http://www.livescience.com/common/media/video/player.php?videoRef=AncientTsunami)
 ]  
"Our models suggest the tsunamis were up to  20 meters (66 feet) high when 
they entered the Hudson River," said researcher  Dallas Abbott, a geologist 
at _Columbia University's_ 
(http://www.livescience.com/environment/asteroid-impact-possibly-caused-prehistoric-nyc-tsunami-101025.html#)
  Lamont-Doherty 
Earth  Observatory in New York.  
New York City lies at the mouth of the  Hudson. When the scientists drilled 
out tubes of sediment from the New York and  New Jersey area, they 
discovered layers of unusual debris that, they suggest,  were laid down by 
tsunamis. 
 
"We have layers up to maybe 30 centimeters  (11.8 inches) thick," Abbott 
said. "They get thinner upriver, where they're more  like 6 centimeters (2.3 
inches) thick."  
Within these potential tsunami layers is  evidence of a _cosmic impact_ 
(http://www.livescience.com/history/090517-Greatest-Exposions.html) , including 
shocked minerals and  microscopic carbon beads loaded with "nano-diamonds," 
which are "all things only  impacts can do," Abbott said. One _candidate_ 
(http://www.livescience.com/environment/asteroid-impact-possibly-caused-prehis
toric-nyc-tsunami-101025.html#)  for the crater that was produced  by this 
impact, she said, lies in the undersea Carteret Canyon, located roughly  90 
miles (150 km) off the coast of New Jersey.  
Other scientists have raised alternate  explanations for these layers. For 
instance, volcanic eruptions or gigantic  landslides on the other side of 
the Atlantic might have caused the giant waves.  Or these anomalous layers of 
sediment that Abbott and her colleagues are  investigating may not have been 
caused by tsunamis at all — hurricanes can  generate huge pulses of water 
known as storm surges, whose effects on sediment  could resemble those of 
tsunamis.  
"Of course, that doesn't explain the evidence  of impact that we've found," 
Abbott said.  
For a cosmic impact, one smoking gun would be  a specific form of deformed 
rock known as shocked quartz. The rock is generated  by the intense heat and 
pressure of a _collision with an extraterrestrial_ 
(http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/double-star-planet-collisions-extraterrestrial-life-100908.htm
l)  object. "But if  there was an oceanic impact, the oceanic crust doesn't 
really have quartz to  shock," Abbott said.  
It there were tsunamis, it remains unclear if  ancient Native Americans 
witnessed them.  
"One possible reason why Indian tribes only  moved into the area relatively 
recently is that the people who were once there  were all wiped out," 
Abbott said. "If you look at the predicted wave heights,  there would have been 
few places to hide."  
Abbott and her colleagues plan to detail  their most recent findings Nov. 3 
in Denver, at the annual meeting of the  Geological Society of America. 

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