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New evidence supporting extraterrestrial impact at the start of the Younger Dryas
Watts Up With That 'blog ^
| Monday, March 12, 2012
| Anthony Watts
Posted on 03/12/2012 4:54:07 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
We report the discovery in Lake Cuitzeo in central Mexico of a black, carbon-rich, lacustrine layer, containing nanodiamonds, microspherules, and other unusual materials that date to the early Younger Dryas and are interpreted to result from an extraterrestrial impact. These proxies were found in a 27-m-long core as part of an interdisciplinary effort to extract a paleoclimate record back through the previous interglacial.
Our attention focused early on an anomalous, 10-cm-thick, carbon-rich layer at a depth of 2.8 m that dates to 12.9 ka and coincides with a suite of anomalous coeval environmental and biotic changes independently recognized in other regional lake sequences.
Collectively, these changes have produced the most distinctive boundary layer in the late Quaternary record. This layer contains a diverse, abundant assemblage of impact-related markers, including nanodiamonds, carbon spherules, and magnetic spherules with rapid melting/quenching textures, all reaching synchronous peaks immediately beneath a layer containing the largest peak of charcoal in the core. Analyses by multiple methods demonstrate the presence of three allotropes of nanodiamond: n-diamond, i-carbon, and hexagonal nanodiamond (lonsdaleite), in order of estimated relative abundance.
This nanodiamond-rich layer is consistent with the Younger Dryas boundary layer found at numerous sites across North America, Greenland, and Western Europe. We have examined multiple hypotheses to account for these observations and find the evidence cannot be explained by any known terrestrial mechanism. It is, however, consistent with the Younger Dryas boundary impact hypothesis postulating a major extraterrestrial impact involving multiple airburst(s) and and/or ground impact(s) at 12.9 ka.
(Excerpt) Read more at wattsupwiththat.com ...
TOPICS: Astronomy; Science
KEYWORDS: carolinabays; catastrophism; clovis; clovisimpact; dryas; godsgravesglyphs; impact; lakecuitzeo; mammoth; mammoths; mastodon; mastodons; mexico; youngerdryas
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The PDF:
- Evidence from central Mexico supporting the Younger Dryas extraterrestrial impact hypothesis, Isabel Israde-Alcántara, James L. Bischoff, Gabriela Domínguez-Vázquez, Hong-Chun Li, Paul S. DeCarli, Ted E. Bunch, James H. Wittke, James C. Weaver, Richard B. Firestone, Allen West, James P. Kennett, Chris Mercer, Sujing Xie, Eric K. Richman, Charles R. Kinzie, and Wendy S. Wolbach
(correspondence to James L. Bischoff)
1
posted on
03/12/2012 4:54:18 PM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
- What killed the mammoths and other behemoths?
- Ancient Atomic Warfare - Religious texts and geological evidence
- The Pleistocene Extinction
- Supernova debris found on Earth
- Deep freeze dealt death knell to bison (Ice Age)
- Humans to Blame for Ice Age Extinctions, Study Says
- Supernova Storm Wiped Out Mammoths?
- Supernova Storm Wiped Out Mammoths?
- Scientist: Comets Blasted Early Americans
- Native Americans Recorded Supernova Explosion
- Terrestrial Evidence of a Nuclear Catastrophe in Paleoindian Times
- Did comet start deadly cold snap?
- Diamonds tell tale of comet that killed off the cavemen
- Catastrophic Comet Chilled and Killed Ice Age Beasts (and Clovis people)
- Oregon Researchers Involved In New Clovis-Age Impact Theory (More)
- Comet May Have Doomed Mammoths
- Ice Age Ends Smashingly: Did A Comet Blow Up Over Eastern Canada? (More) (Carolina Bays)
- Climate alarmists lose another piece of evidence
- Comet Theory Collides With Clovis Research, May Explain Disappearance of Ancient People
- NSF Press Release: Comet May Have Exploded Over North America 13,000 Years Ago
- Research Team Says Extraterrestrial Impact To Blame For Ice Age Extinctions (More)
- Cosmic blast may have killed off megafauna: Scientists say early humans doomed, too
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- First Humans To Settle Americas Came From Europe, Not From Asia....
- Diamonds Rained Down During Ice Age
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- First Humans To Settle Americas Came From Europe, Not From Asia Over Bering Strait -
- Tracking down abrupt climate changes (Rapid natural climate change 12,700 years ago)
- Mammoth Mystery: The Beasts' Final Years
- Scientists find signs of 13,000-year-old extinction event
- Scientists say comet killed off mammoths, saber-toothed tigers
- Diamonds Linked to Quick Cooling Eons Ago
- Six North American sites hold 12,900-year-old nanodiamond-rich soil
- Did a Comet Hit Earth 12,000 Years Ago?
- Mammoths wiped out by 'perfect storm?'
- Laser mapping may help solve the mystery of the Mima Mounds
- Humans to Blame for Extinction? - Not Necessarily So ...
- Did a Comet Cause a North American Die-Off around 13,000 Years Ago?
- Carolina bays gouged into the ground at a magnetic reversal
- North America comet theory questioned
- Mini ice age took hold of Europe in months
- Car-Sized Creature Whacked with Tail's Sweet Spot (until 10,000 years ago)
- Starvation 'wiped out' giant deer
- Prehistoric man, giant animal coexisted
- Extinction of Giant Mammals Changed Landscape Dramatically
- Sophisticated hunters not to blame for driving mammoths to extinction
- Big freeze plunged Europe into ice age in months
- Kansas scientists probe mysterious possible comet strikes on Earth
- Explosive Nearby Star Could Threaten Earth
- T Pyxidis Soon To Be A Type Ia Supernova
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- Cave reveals Southwest's abrupt climate swings during Ice Age
- Musk Ox Population Decline Due to Climate, Not Humans, Study Finds
- Hour-long hailstorm may have caused 1,000-year freeze, say scientists
- Comet trail may have caused last ice age - UPI.com
- New Study Reveals Link Between 'Climate Footprints' and Mass Mammal Extinction
- As Mammoths Died Out, Earth Chilled (mammoth burp and fart levels dropped, contributing to cooling)
- Methane Extinctions - Could this Explain the Carolina Bays?
- Fungi, Feces Show Comet Didn't Kill Ice Age Mammals?
- Answer to what ended the last ice age may be blowing in the winds, paper says
- Los Angeles oil history runs deep
- Woolly mammoth extinction 'not linked to humans'
- True causes for extinction of cave bear revealed
- Mammoth-killing space blast 'off the hook'
- No evidence for Clovis comet catastrophe, archaeologists say
- Comet Theory Comes Crashing to Earth
- Scientists reveal a first in Ice Age art
- Plasma, Solar Outbursts, and the End of the Last Ice Age
- How Mammoths Lost The Extinction Lottery
2
posted on
03/12/2012 4:55:13 PM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him)
3
posted on
03/12/2012 4:55:13 PM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him)
To: 75thOVI; agrace; aimhigh; Alice in Wonderland; AndrewC; aragorn; aristotleman; Avoiding_Sulla; ...
4
posted on
03/12/2012 4:57:52 PM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him)
To: Thud; StayAt HomeMother; Ernest_at_the_Beach; decimon; 1010RD; 21twelve; 24Karet; 2ndDivisionVet; ..
5
posted on
03/12/2012 4:58:43 PM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him)
To: SunkenCiv
OK you win.
That's a humungous reference list. I thank you.
6
posted on
03/12/2012 5:01:25 PM PDT
by
Publius6961
(“It’s easy to make phony promises you can’t keep.” - Obama, Feb23, 2012)
To: SunkenCiv
Please put this into plain English. If it weren’t for 5 years of Anthropology, Archaeology and 3 years of geology, I wouldn’t have a clue as to what this article was about.
In plain English, a big-assed meteor/comet/asteroid hit the earth and its’ impact ring covered a wide geographic area, leaving behind identical impact fragments/evidence that could be dated.
To: SunkenCiv
I’m starting to love that blog. It’s going on my favorites list.
8
posted on
03/12/2012 5:11:26 PM PDT
by
SaxxonWoods
(....The days are long, but the years are short.....)
To: Publius6961
Always with the lists ~ they're getting longer and longer too.
Lots of archaeological work going on in the Americas. I think it's a function of UNEMPLOYMENT ~ keeps the grad students going out to the field to earn those stipends ~
Now, back to this discovery ~ that's a good one. The chunks with the gold in them are back up the way toward Ontario. They were mostly destroyed "back in the day".
This thing hit the ice right on top of one of Canada's greatest gold bearing regions and stripped off the top layers and blew them all over the Midwest, and probably Mexico, and probably even Northern South America and MesoAmerica.
NO gold of any kind has been found in the bed of former Lake Erie ~ which stretched from West of Fort Wayne Indiana to where it is now. It's there, but no one has dug down the 50 feet or so of muck to get to the Younger Dryas layer. I'm sure it can be done ~ that lake was still there 4,000 years ago BTW so a lot of it is now allegedly dry land. 50 feet guys~! a vast treasure in Canadian gold ~ all in the form of "gold flour".
9
posted on
03/12/2012 5:12:20 PM PDT
by
muawiyah
To: SunkenCiv
An angled impact in the Iowa/Illinois area would explain the Carolina Bays...
10
posted on
03/12/2012 5:20:22 PM PDT
by
djf
(http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/2801220/posts)
To: MadMax, the Grinning Reaper
IT exploded in the atmosphere or within a residual hunk of the great Ice Sheets that'd covered Canada entirely up to 1500 years earlier.
When you have a comet or meteor hit a chunk of Big Ice it's going to 'splode like nobody's business in SECONDS.
It would excavate a great mass of the underlying earth ~ rocks, dirt, gold bearing sands (quartz and otherwise), and everything else.
That mass would go flying out for thouands of miles and come down where it could be found later and "mined", ploughed under, or whatever.
My theory is that there was enough recoverable gold in the debris that the debris was mostly dissipated and destroyed as evidence even in Paleo-Indian times, and certainly by Spanish and other European gold hunting periods. That gold was sent to Europe for the most part after the Spanish conquest.
This stuff shouldn't be all that deep ~ hence the easy access.
The goldbearing region in Virginia was REVEALED by a larger asteroid that hit the DELMARVA peninsula several million years back. That is different ~ and explains why all the gold in Virginia and south into the Carolanas is kind of along the Fall Line!
11
posted on
03/12/2012 5:25:05 PM PDT
by
muawiyah
To: djf
The Carolina Bays are much more recent.
12
posted on
03/12/2012 5:25:59 PM PDT
by
muawiyah
To: djf
Ooooh, you will like that book!
13
posted on
03/12/2012 5:28:05 PM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him)
To: MadMax, the Grinning Reaper
I’ll write the mods, see if they’ll change the title. ;’)
14
posted on
03/12/2012 5:31:33 PM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him)
To: muawiyah
The article says 12.9 ka.
About 13,000 years ago.
That’s less than a blink of an eye in geologic terms.
15
posted on
03/12/2012 5:33:18 PM PDT
by
djf
(http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/2801220/posts)
To: muawiyah
No, they’re not. The bays were formed and the black mat was laid down at that time; various erosional events came later, and uniformitarian jokers messed up the dating, even when they actually did field work.
16
posted on
03/12/2012 5:49:09 PM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him)
To: Publius6961
[’Civ holds up both gloves and struts around the ring]
;’)
17
posted on
03/12/2012 5:49:36 PM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him)
To: SaxxonWoods
I should add it to the list of GGG sources, it may be a good one to visit more often.
18
posted on
03/12/2012 5:50:06 PM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him)
To: SunkenCiv
As you should...
After reading the Firestone book, I was thoroughly convinced. Now there is this very nearly irrefutable evidence of an impact which will open up many minds to such events. They have happened. They may happen in the future.
I remember a story about geologists or archaeologists doing core samples off the western Florida coast and pulling up the remains of a charred pine forest, with some of the debris so well preserved you could still smell the sap in the wood. Seems that the dating on this wood was close to the impact period. Do you remember this article?
19
posted on
03/12/2012 6:28:05 PM PDT
by
BrewingFrog
(I brew, therefore I am!)
To: SunkenCiv
Why not do it this way ~ they didn't happen at the same time because they came in from the WRONG direction. On the other hand, if this was merely the debris left over from a broken up comet and we went through the debris belt several times over a number of trips around the Sun, you could, of course, have the same sort of events ~ big holes ~ but the entry angle would be different each time.
Figuring out how to get different entry angles for a single event is rather difficult. Two events explain things easier, and a comet breakup is a well known phenomenon. In fact, many of our best shooting star events are simply us taking a trip through a comet's path (over and over and over).
20
posted on
03/12/2012 6:39:55 PM PDT
by
muawiyah
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