Chicxulub crater

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Chicxulub crater is located in North America
Chicxulub crater
Location of Chicxulub crater, Mexico
Imaging from NASA's Shuttle Radar Topography Mission STS-99 reveals part of the 180 km (110 mi) diameter ring of the crater. The numerous sinkholes clustered around the trough of the crater suggest a prehistoric oceanic basin in the depression left by the impact.[1]

The Chicxulub crater (pronunciation: /ˈkʃᵿlb/; Mayan: [tʃʼikʃuluɓ]) is an impact crater buried underneath the Yucatán Peninsula in Mexico.[2] Its center is located near the town of Chicxulub, after which the crater is named.[3] It was formed by a large asteroid or comet about 10 to 15 kilometres (6 to 9 miles) in diameter,[4][5] the Chicxulub impactor, striking the Earth. The date of the impact coincides precisely with the Cretaceous–Paleogene boundary (K–Pg boundary), slightly less than 66 million years ago,[6] and a widely accepted theory is that worldwide climate disruption from the event was the cause of the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event, a mass extinction in which 75% of plant and animal species on Earth suddenly became extinct, including all non-avian dinosaurs. The crater is more than 180 kilometers (110 miles) in diameter and 20 km (12 mi) in depth, well into the continental crust of the region of about 10–30 km depth. It makes the feature the third of the largest confirmed impact structures on Earth.

The crater was discovered by Antonio Camargo and Glen Penfield, geophysicists who had been looking for petroleum in the Yucatán during the late 1970s. Penfield was initially unable to obtain evidence that the geological feature was a crater and gave up his search. Later, through contact with Alan Hildebrand in 1990, Penfield obtained samples that suggested it was an impact feature. Evidence for the impact origin of the crater includes shocked quartz,[7] a gravity anomaly, and tektites in surrounding areas.

Discovery

Gravity anomaly map of the Chicxulub impact structure. The coastline is shown as a white line. A striking series of concentric features reveals the location of the crater. White dots represent water-filled sinkholes (solution-collapse features common in the limestone rocks of the region) called cenotes after the Maya word dzonot. A dramatic ring of cenotes is associated with the largest peripheral gravity-gradient feature. The origin of the cenote ring remains uncertain, although the link to the underlying buried crater seems clear.

In 1978, geophysicists Glen Penfield and Antonio Camargo were working for the Mexican state-owned oil company Petróleos Mexicanos, or Pemex, as part of an airborne magnetic survey of the Gulf of Mexico north of the Yucatán peninsula.[8] Penfield's job was to use geophysical data to scout possible locations for oil drilling.[9] In the data, Penfield found a huge underwater arc with "extraordinary symmetry" in a ring 70 km (40 mi) across.[3] He then obtained a gravity map of the Yucatán made in the 1960s. A decade earlier, the same map suggested an impact feature to contractor Robert Baltosser, but he was forbidden to publicize his conclusion by Pemex corporate policy of the time.[10] Penfield found another arc on the peninsula itself, the ends of which pointed northward. Comparing the two maps, he found the separate arcs formed a circle, 180 km (110 mi) wide, centered near the Yucatán village Chicxulub; he felt certain the shape had been created by a cataclysmic event in geologic history.

Pemex disallowed release of specific data but let Penfield and company official Antonio Camargo present their results at the 1981 Society of Exploration Geophysicists conference.[11] That year's conference was underattended and their report attracted scant attention. Coincidentally, many experts in impact craters and the K–Pg boundary were attending a separate conference on Earth impacts. Although Penfield had plenty of geophysical data sets, he had no rock cores or other physical evidence of an impact.[9]

He knew Pemex had drilled exploratory wells in the region. In 1951, one bored into what was described as a thick layer of andesite about 1.3 kilometres (4,300 ft) down. This layer could have resulted from the intense heat and pressure of an Earth impact, but at the time of the borings it was dismissed as a lava dome—a feature uncharacteristic of the region's geology. Penfield tried to secure site samples, but was told such samples had been lost or destroyed.[9] When attempts at returning to the drill sites and looking for rocks proved fruitless, Penfield abandoned his search, published his findings and returned to his Pemex work.

Penfield with the sample of shocked quartz found at Well #2, Chicxulub

At the same time, in 1980, geologist Walter Alvarez and his father, Nobel Prize-winning scientist Luis Walter Alvarez, put forth his hypothesis that a large extraterrestrial body had struck Earth. In 1981, unaware of Penfield's discovery, University of Arizona graduate student Alan R. Hildebrand and faculty adviser William V. Boynton published a draft Earth-impact theory and sought a candidate crater.[12] Their evidence included greenish-brown clay with surplus iridium containing shocked quartz grains and small weathered glass beads that looked to be tektites.[13] Thick, jumbled deposits of coarse rock fragments were also present, thought to have been scoured from one place and deposited elsewhere by a megatsunami resulting from an Earth impact.[14] Such deposits occur in many locations but seem concentrated in the Caribbean basin at the K–Pg boundary.[14] So when Haitian professor Florentine Morás discovered what he thought to be evidence of an ancient volcano on Haiti, Hildebrand suggested it could be a telltale feature of a nearby impact.[15] Tests on samples retrieved from the K–Pg boundary revealed more tektite glass, formed only in the heat of asteroid impacts and high-yield nuclear detonations.[15]

In 1990, Houston Chronicle reporter Carlos Byars told Hildebrand of Penfield's earlier discovery of a possible impact crater.[16] Hildebrand contacted Penfield in April 1990 and the pair soon secured two drill samples from the Pemex wells, stored in New Orleans.[17] Hildebrand's team tested the samples, which clearly showed shock-metamorphic materials.

A team of California researchers including Kevin Pope, Adriana Ocampo, and Charles Duller, surveying regional satellite images in 1996, found a cenote (sinkhole) ring centered on Chicxulub that matched the one Penfield saw earlier; the sinkholes were thought to be caused by subsidence of the impact crater wall.[18] More recent evidence suggests the actual crater is 300 km (190 mi) wide, and the 180 km ring is in fact an inner wall of it.[19]

Impact specifics

An animation showing the impact, and subsequent crater formation (University of Arizona, Space Imagery Center).

Researchers at the University of Glasgow dated tektites samples from the impact as 66,038,000 ± 11,000 years old.[20]

The Chicxulub impactor had an estimated diameter of 15 kilometres (9.3 mi), and delivered an estimated energy of 10 billion Hiroshima A-bombs (about 1E23 Joules, or 100,000 EJ).[21] By contrast, the most powerful man-made explosive device ever detonated, the Tsar Bomba, had an energy of only 210 petajoules (2.10E17 joules, the yield of 50 megatons of TNT).[22] The object dug a hole 100 kilometres (62 mi) wide and 30 kilometres (19 mi) deep, leaving a crater mainly under the sea and covered by 600 metres (2,000 ft) of sediment in the 21st century.[21]

Effects

The impact would have caused a megatsunami over 100 metres (330 ft) tall[23] that would have reached all the way to what are now Texas and Florida.[24] The height of the tsunami was limited by the relatively shallow sea in the area of the impact; in deep sea it would have been 4.6 kilometres (2.9 mi) tall.[23] A cloud of super-heated dust, ash and steam would have spread from the crater as the impactor burrowed underground in less than a second.[25] Excavated material along with pieces of the impactor, ejected out of the atmosphere by the blast, would have been heated to incandescence upon re-entry, broiling the Earth's surface and possibly igniting wildfires; meanwhile, colossal shock waves would have triggered global earthquakes and volcanic eruptions.[26] Fossil evidence for an instantaneous die-off of diverse animals was found in a soil layer only 10 centimetres (3.9 in) thick in New Jersey some 5,000 kilometres (3,100 mi) away from the impact site, indicating that death and burial under debris occurred suddenly and quickly over wide distances on land.[21]

The emission of dust and particles could have covered the entire surface of the Earth for several years, possibly a decade, creating a harsh environment for living things. The shock production of carbon dioxide caused by the destruction of carbonate rocks would have led to a sudden greenhouse effect.[27] Over a longer period, sunlight would have been blocked from reaching the surface of the Earth by the dust particles in the atmosphere, cooling the surface dramatically. Photosynthesis by plants would also have been interrupted, affecting the entire food chain.[28][29] A model of the event developed by Lomax et al. (2001) suggests that net primary productivity (NPP) rates may have increased to higher than pre-impact levels over the long term because of the high carbon dioxide concentrations.[30]

In February 2008, a team of researchers led by Sean Gulick at the University of Texas at Austin's Jackson School of Geosciences used seismic images of the crater to determine that the impactor landed in deeper water than was previously assumed. They argued that this would have resulted in increased sulfate aerosols in the atmosphere. According to the press release, that "could have made the impact deadlier in two ways: by altering climate (sulfate aerosols in the upper atmosphere can have a cooling effect) and by generating acid rain (water vapor can help to flush the lower atmosphere of sulfate aerosols, causing acid rain)."[31]

A long-term local effect of the impact was the creation of the Yucatán sedimentary basin which "ultimately produced favorable conditions for human settlement in a region where surface water is scarce."[32]

Geology and morphology

The piece of clay, held by Walter Alvarez, that sparked research into the impact theory. The greenish-brown band in the center is extremely rich in iridium.

In their 1991 paper, Hildebrand, Penfield, and company described the geology and composition of the impact feature.[33] The rocks above the impact feature are layers of marl and limestone reaching to a depth of almost 1,000 m (3,300 ft). These rocks date back as far as the Paleocene.[34] Below these layers lie more than 500 m (1,600 ft) of andesite glass and breccia. These andesitic igneous rocks were only found within the supposed impact feature, as is shocked quartz.[34] The K–Pg boundary inside the feature is depressed to 600 to 1,100 m (2,000 to 3,600 ft) compared with the normal depth of about 500 m (1,600 ft) measured 5 km (3 mi) away from the impact feature.[35] Along the edge of the crater are clusters of cenotes or sinkholes,[36] which suggest that there was a water basin inside the feature during the Neogene period, after the impact.[35] The groundwater of such a basin would have dissolved the limestone and created the caves and cenotes beneath the surface.[37] The paper also noted that the crater seemed to be a good candidate source for the tektites reported at Haiti.[38]

Astronomical origin of asteroid

In September 2007, a report published in Nature proposed an origin for the asteroid that created the Chicxulub crater.[28] The authors, William F. Bottke, David Vokrouhlický, and David Nesvorný, argued that a collision in the asteroid belt 160 million years ago resulted in the Baptistina family of asteroids, the largest surviving member of which is 298 Baptistina. They proposed that the "Chicxulub asteroid" was also a member of this group. The connection between Chicxulub and Baptistina is supported by the large amount of carbonaceous material present in microscopic fragments of the impactor, suggesting the impactor was a member of a rare class of asteroids called carbonaceous chondrites, like Baptistina.[39] According to Bottke, the Chicxulub impactor was a fragment of a much larger parent body about 170 km (106 mi) across, with the other impacting body being around 60 km (37 mi) in diameter.[39][40] In 2011, new data from the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer revised the date of the collision which created the Baptistina family to about 80 million years ago. This makes an asteroid from this family highly improbable to be the asteroid that created the Chicxulub crater, as typically the process of resonance and collision of an asteroid takes many tens of millions of years.[41] In 2010, another hypothesis was offered which implicated the newly discovered asteroid P/2010 A2, a member of the Flora family of asteroids, as a possible remnant cohort of the K/Pg impactor.[42]

Chicxulub and mass extinction

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The Chicxulub Crater lends support to the theory postulated by the late physicist Luis Alvarez and his son, geologist Walter Alvarez, that the extinction of numerous animal and plant groups, including non-avian dinosaurs, may have resulted from a bolide impact (the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event). Luis and Walter Alvarez, at the time both faculty members at the University of California, Berkeley, postulated that this enormous extinction event, which was roughly contemporaneous with the postulated date of formation for the Chicxulub crater, could have been caused by just such a large impact.[43] The age of the rocks marked by the impact shows that this impact structure dates from roughly 66 million years ago, the end of the Cretaceous period, and the start of the Paleogene period. It coincides with the K–Pg boundary, the geological boundary between the Cretaceous and Paleogene. The impact associated with the crater is thus implicated in the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event, including the worldwide extinction of non-avian dinosaurs. This conclusion has been the source of controversy. In March 2010, 41 experts from many countries reviewed the available evidence: 20 years' worth of data spanning a variety of fields. They concluded that the impact at Chicxulub triggered the mass extinctions at the K–Pg boundary.[4][44] In 2013 a study compared isotopes in impact glass from the Chicxulub impact with the same isotopes in ash from the boundary where the extinction event occurred in the fossil record; the study concluded that the impact glasses were dated at 66.038 ± 0.049 Ma, and the deposits immediately above the discontinuity in the geological and fossil record was dated to 66.019 ± 0.021 Ma, the two dates being within 19,000 years of each other, or almost exactly the same within experimental error.[45] The theory is now widely accepted by the scientific community. Some critics, including paleontologist Robert Bakker, argue that such an impact would have killed frogs as well as dinosaurs, yet the frogs survived the extinction event.[46] Gerta Keller of Princeton University argues that recent core samples from Chicxulub prove the impact occurred about 300,000 years before the mass extinction, and thus could not have been the causal factor.[47] However, this conclusion is unsupported by radioactive dating and sedimentology.[4][45]

The main evidence of such an impact, besides the crater itself, is contained in a thin layer of clay present in the K–Pg boundary across the world. In the late 1970s, the Alvarezes and colleagues reported that it contained an abnormally high concentration of iridium.[48] Iridium levels in this layer reached 6 parts per billion by weight or more compared to 0.4 for the Earth's crust as a whole;[49] in comparison, meteorites can contain around 470 parts per billion of this element.[50] It was hypothesized that the iridium was spread into the atmosphere when the impactor was vaporized and settled across the Earth's surface amongst other material thrown up by the impact, producing the layer of iridium-enriched clay.[51] Similarly, an iridium anomaly in core samples from the Pacific Ocean suggested the Eltanin impact of about 2.5 million years ago.[52][53]

Multiple impact hypothesis

In recent years, several other craters of around the same age as Chicxulub have been discovered, all between latitudes 20°N and 70°N. Examples include the disputed[54] Silverpit crater in the North Sea[55] and the Boltysh crater in Ukraine.[56] Both are much smaller than Chicxulub, but are likely to have been caused by objects many tens of meters across striking the Earth.[57] This has led to the hypothesis that the Chicxulub impact may have been only one of several impacts that happened nearly at the same time.[58] Another possible crater thought to have been formed at the same time is the larger Shiva crater,[59] though the structure's status as a crater is contested.[60]

The collision of Comet Shoemaker–Levy 9 with Jupiter in 1994 demonstrated that gravitational interactions can fragment a comet, giving rise to many impacts over a period of a few days if the comet should collide with a planet. Comets undergo gravitational interactions with the gas giants, and similar disruptions and collisions are very likely to have occurred in the past.[59][61] This scenario may have occurred on Earth at the end of the Cretaceous,[58] though Shiva and the Chicxulub craters might have been formed 300,000 years apart.[59]

In late 2006, Ken MacLeod, a geology professor from the University of Missouri, completed an analysis of sediment below the ocean's surface, bolstering the single-impact theory. MacLeod conducted his analysis approximately 4,500 kilometres (2,800 mi) from the Chicxulub crater to control for possible changes in soil composition at the impact site, while still close enough to be affected by the impact. The analysis revealed there was only one layer of impact debris in the sediment, which indicated there was only one impact.[62] Multiple-impact proponents such as Gerta Keller regard the results as "rather hyper-inflated" and do not agree with the conclusion of MacLeod's analysis,[63] arguing that there might only be gaps of hours to days between impacts in a multiple-impact scenario (cf. Shoemaker-Levy 9) which would not leave a detectable gap in deposits.

Scientific studies

Chicxulub is the only known Earth crater with a remaining impact peak ring, but it is under 600 m (2,000 ft) of sediment.[64] During April and May 2016, a joint IODP-ICDP[65][66] Mission Specific Platform Expedition obtained the first offshore core samples from the peak ring, the central zone of the crater.[67] During Expedition 364, DES[68] drillers on the L/B Myrtle[69] collected core samples to enable ECORD[70] Science Party members to study how the peak ring formed and calculate the total impact energy.

Their target depth was 1,500 m (4,900 ft) below the bottom of the ocean,[71] but they reached an acceptable 1,335 m.[67] Sample preparation and analysis are being performed at Bremen, Germany.[64]

It was announced in November 2016 that pink granite, usually found deep in the Earth's crust, had been found in drilling samples. It suggests the impact was so great it shocked rocks deep in the crust, causing them to shoot up before falling back down to produce the peak rings. The granite samples were also found to be lighter and weaker than normal granite.[72]

A program on British television[73] described:

  • A deep drilling into the inner ring of the Chicxulub crater. It found, from top down:
    • Thick Cenozoic limestone.
    • A graded sediment deposit from one tsunami, over 100 meters thick.
    • Impact-melted rock and shocked quartz. This did not contain the calcium sulphate that the rocks in the area around contain, leading the program makers to conclude that all the calcium sulphate in the crater area had been evaporated into the atmosphere and had become a dense sulphur dioxide veil stopping the sunlight.
  • In a quarry in New Jersey, a dense marine bone bed on the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary containing a mixture of dead sea animals with little or no damage from scavengers or predators, and land animals and parts of trees washed into the sea by a tsunami.
  • In Patagonia a dense dinosaur bone bed on the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary.

See also

Notes

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References

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    Bakker, Robert T. Interview: The Dinosaurs: Death of the Dinosaur. 1990, WHYY.
    Hildebrand, Alan. Interview: The Dinosaurs: Death of the Dinosaur. 1992, WHYY.
    Melosh, Gene. Interview: The Dinosaurs: Death of the Dinosaur. 1992, (1990): WHYY.
    Moras, Florentine. Interview: The Dinosaurs: Death of the Dinosaur. 1992, (filmed 1990): WHYY.
    Penfield, Glen. Interview: The Dinosaurs: Death of the Dinosaur. 1992, WHYY.
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Further reading

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External links

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  3. 3.0 3.1 Penfield.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Schulte, et al., 2010
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  10. Verschuur, 20.
  11. Weinreb.
  12. Mason.
  13. Hildebrand, Penfield, et al.
  14. 14.0 14.1 Hildebrand interview: 'Similar deposits of rubble occur all across the southern coast of North America [...] indicate that something extraordinary happened here.'
  15. 15.0 15.1 Morás.
  16. Frankel, 50.
  17. Hildebrand interview.
  18. Pope, Baines, et al.
  19. Sharpton & Marin.
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  25. Melosh, interview.
  26. Melosh. "On the ground, you would feel an effect similar to an oven on broil, lasting for about an hour [...] causing global forest fires."
  27. Hildebrand, Penfield, et al.; 5.
  28. 28.0 28.1 Perlman.
  29. Pope, Ocampo, et al.
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  33. Hildebrand, Penfield, et al.; 1.
  34. 34.0 34.1 Hildebrand, Penfield, et al.; 3.
  35. 35.0 35.1 Hildebrand, Penfield, et al.; 4.
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  37. Kring, "Discovering the Crater".
  38. Sigurdsson.
  39. 39.0 39.1 Bottke, Vokrouhlicky, Nesvorny.
  40. Ingham.
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  43. Alvarez, W. interview.
  44. Rincon.
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  46. Kring, "Environment Consequences".
  47. Keller, et al.
  48. Alvarez.
  49. Web Elements.
  50. Quivx.
  51. Mayell.
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  55. Stewart, Allen.
  56. Kelley, Gurov.
  57. Stewart.
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  60. Mullen, "Shiva".
  61. Weisstein.
  62. Than.
  63. Dunham.
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  73. The Day the Dinosaurs Died, BBC2 television, 1 July 2017, 6 to 7 pm