News

For the classroom

 

PhotoGallery

Contact

Credits


Impact in Australia Nearly nearly wiped out life on Earth                                            
14 May 2004



The crater was probably caused by an asteroid about 1 km in diameter that crashed into the earth about 142 million years ago. The isolated circular feature within the crater consists of a central ring of hills about 4.5 km in diameter. Image courtesy of NASA


Evidence is mounting that 251 million years ago, long before the dinosaurs dominated the Earth, a meteor the size of
Mount Everest smashed into what is now northern Australia, heaving rock halfway around the globe, triggering mass volcanic eruptions, and wiping out all but about ten percent of the species on the planet. The "Great Dying," as it's called, was by far the most cataclysmic extinction event in Earth's history, yet scientists have been unable to finger a culprit as they have with the dinosaur extinction.

Researchers at the University of Rochester and the University of California at Santa Barbara (UCSB) points the finger for the Great Dying squarely at the heavens."This is very likely the impact site we've been looking for," says Robert Poreda, professor of earth and environmental sciences at the University of Rochester . "For years we've been observing evidence that a meteor or comet hit the southern hemisphere 251 million years ago, and this structure matches everything we've been expecting."

n 2001, Poreda and Luann Becker, research scientist in geological sciences at UCSB, announced that they had detected in 251-million-year-old strata, specific isotopes of helium and argon trapped inside buckyballs--a cage-like formation of carbon atoms--that could only have come from space. Since they were laid down in this same strata around much of the globe, the implication was that a giant meteor had struck the Earth, vaporized, and settled around the southern hemisphere. This past November, the same three authors found actual pieces of the meteorite that struck the Earth 251 million years ago.


Extraterrestrial buckyball - the carbon balls are thought to originate from open space, and their presence on Earth, evidence for meteor impact.

The Permian Extinction
Just like with the Cretaceous-Tertiary extinction (K-T) that wiped out the dinosaurs, many experts disbelieved the theory that a cosmic impact could be responsible, but now it is largely accepted. The Permian extinction is one of five major extinctions throughout Earth history that have significantly affected the evolution of life, and 251 million years ago the planet witnessed the biggest one to date.

Needle in a haystack
The team knew that the chances of finding the crater, even one from an impact large enough to nearly wipe out life on Earth, would be difficult because the majority of the Earth is covered by ocean. Had the meteor struck there, its telltale crater would have long ago disappeared. As luck would have it, an oil-drilling exploration team in 1970 found a "dome" in the area of Bedout, just off the northwestern coast of
Australia . Now covered by 2 miles of sediment, this area was most likely dry land 251 million years ago. Frequently, such domes herald large oil deposits, but in this case the drilling team found only volcanic rock. The core samples were shelved and forgotten for 25 years, until in 1995 a report in a journal aimed at the oil industry mentioned that the rock might have been formed from a meteor impact.

Geophysical analysis shows the rock strata underlying the dome at Bedout is fractured exactly the way the team expected--showing rock strata older than 251 million years old broken apart, with younger rock above laid down without the fractures. Simulations of a six-mile wide rock striking the area suggest a crater rim should be visible about 60 miles from the central dome, and despite the extreme age of the impact site and the rearrangement of continental plates since then, there is evidence of a rim at that distance. The team has plans to explore the geophysical outlay of the region with more scrutiny.

Coincidentally, the crater, at 120 miles across, is almost exactly the same size as the Chicxulub crater in the Caribbean that has been identified as the impact site of the meteorite that dealt the dinosaurs their death blow. It's likely that the bodies that struck at each site were of the same size and traveling at similar speeds.

"There have been five mass extinctions throughout the Earth's history," says Poreda. "Now we have very strong evidence that massive meteor impacts happened precisely at two of those extinctions."

 

The research was funded by NASA and the National Science Foundation.

Source: University of Rochester