Periodicity for mass extinctions correlated with movements thru galactic plane.

<http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/05/080502092145.htm>

The Sun's Movement Through Milky Way Regularly Sends Comets Hurtling, 
Coinciding With Mass Life Extinctions

ScienceDaily (May 2, 2008) — The sun's movement through the Milky Way regularly 
sends comets hurtling into the inner solar system -- coinciding with mass life 
extinctions on earth, a new study claims. The study suggests  a link between 
comet bombardment and the movement through the galaxy.

Scientists at the Cardiff Centre for Astrobiology built a computer model of our 
solar system's movement and found that it "bounces" up and down through the 
plane of the galaxy. As we pass through the densest part of the plane, 
gravitational forces from the surrounding giant gas and dust clouds dislodge 
comets from their paths. The comets plunge into the solar system, some of them 
colliding with the earth.

The Cardiff team found that we pass through the galactic plane every 35 to 40 
million years, increasing the chances of a comet collision tenfold. Evidence 
from craters on Earth also suggests we suffer more collisions approximately 36 
million years. Professor William Napier, of the Cardiff Centre for 
Astrobiology, said: "It's a beautiful match between what we see on the ground 
and what is expected from the galactic record."

The periods of comet bombardment also coincide with mass extinctions, such as 
that of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago. Our present position in the galaxy 
suggests we are now very close to another such period.

While the "bounce" effect may have been bad news for dinosaurs, it may also 
have helped life to spread. The scientists suggest the impact may have thrown 
debris containing micro-organisms out into space and across the universe.

Centre director Professor Chandra Wickramasinghe said: "This is a seminal paper 
which places the comet-life interaction on a firm basis, and shows a mechanism 
by which life can be dispersed on a galactic scale."

The paper, by Professor Napier and Dr Janaki Wickramasinghe, is to be published 
in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

Adapted from materials provided by Cardiff University, via EurekAlert!, a 
service of AAAS.
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