The Prague Post - Asteroid dust caused 15-year winter that killed dinosaurs: study

EUR -
AED 4.297282
AFN 73.717704
ALL 95.423781
AMD 434.574765
ANG 2.094387
AOA 1074.173937
ARS 1643.710921
AUD 1.635073
AWG 2.107686
AZN 1.993565
BAM 1.956718
BBD 2.356286
BDT 143.866296
BGN 1.951887
BHD 0.441598
BIF 3481.119542
BMD 1.170124
BND 1.493788
BOB 8.08376
BRL 5.822776
BSD 1.169839
BTN 110.543941
BWP 15.822291
BYN 3.300721
BYR 22934.434632
BZD 2.352894
CAD 1.601046
CDF 2717.617224
CHF 0.923632
CLF 0.026509
CLP 1043.305899
CNY 8.000665
CNH 7.998759
COP 4229.566095
CRC 532.145223
CUC 1.170124
CUP 31.008292
CVE 110.456559
CZK 24.377958
DJF 207.954313
DKK 7.474081
DOP 69.329414
DZD 155.103919
EGP 62.021031
ERN 17.551863
ETB 184.148305
FJD 2.575736
FKP 0.866034
GBP 0.866769
GEL 3.15348
GGP 0.866034
GHS 13.035716
GIP 0.866034
GMD 85.998758
GNF 10270.767002
GTQ 8.938119
GYD 244.754879
HKD 9.169953
HNL 31.148743
HRK 7.534545
HTG 153.250621
HUF 364.2468
IDR 20317.627342
ILS 3.469149
IMP 0.866034
INR 110.895243
IQD 1532.862723
IRR 1539883.467853
ISK 143.199896
JEP 0.866034
JMD 184.326517
JOD 0.829629
JPY 186.954837
KES 151.121164
KGS 102.30349
KHR 4692.19838
KMF 492.622726
KPW 1053.07279
KRW 1731.281152
KWD 0.360187
KYD 0.974949
KZT 536.237108
LAK 25678.375577
LBP 104774.558968
LKR 372.90184
LRD 215.009958
LSL 19.34804
LTL 3.455073
LVL 0.707796
LYD 7.424425
MAD 10.830963
MDL 20.233324
MGA 4854.845541
MKD 61.643378
MMK 2457.236968
MNT 4187.741374
MOP 9.443192
MRU 46.805181
MUR 54.797177
MVR 18.078339
MWK 2037.186699
MXN 20.36923
MYR 4.623745
MZN 74.782987
NAD 19.365424
NGN 1610.149054
NIO 42.961129
NOK 10.89251
NPR 176.870505
NZD 1.997332
OMR 0.44993
PAB 1.169844
PEN 4.114124
PGK 5.083897
PHP 72.149323
PKR 326.142899
PLN 4.253776
PYG 7333.379363
QAR 4.263055
RON 5.100921
RSD 117.416152
RUB 87.760116
RWF 1708.966417
SAR 4.388471
SBD 9.391341
SCR 15.832922
SDG 702.6588
SEK 10.851474
SGD 1.49498
SHP 0.873616
SLE 28.814296
SLL 24536.915259
SOS 668.739844
SRD 43.838692
STD 24219.208798
STN 24.86514
SVC 10.236717
SYP 129.573821
SZL 19.365509
THB 38.228364
TJS 10.973551
TMT 4.101285
TND 3.374346
TOP 2.817378
TRY 52.737206
TTD 7.954666
TWD 36.965377
TZS 3042.46688
UAH 51.556558
UGX 4352.005488
USD 1.170124
UYU 46.171277
UZS 14123.399244
VES 567.063918
VND 30839.793835
VUV 138.510141
WST 3.177912
XAF 656.259417
XAG 0.016069
XAU 0.000256
XCD 3.162319
XCG 2.108372
XDR 0.816417
XOF 654.683707
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.250603
ZAR 19.422365
ZMK 10532.527182
ZMW 22.196323
ZWL 376.77952
  • RIO

    -1.4600

    98.49

    -1.48%

  • RBGPF

    -0.5300

    63.47

    -0.84%

  • CMSD

    -0.0600

    23.2

    -0.26%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1000

    15.3

    -0.65%

  • CMSC

    -0.0300

    22.83

    -0.13%

  • NGG

    0.2200

    87.45

    +0.25%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    23.5

    -0.26%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    15.49

    -0.13%

  • BTI

    1.1500

    58.47

    +1.97%

  • RELX

    -0.3800

    36.01

    -1.06%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    12.81

    -0.16%

  • GSK

    0.2500

    54.47

    +0.46%

  • BCC

    -1.2500

    82.61

    -1.51%

  • BP

    0.3800

    46.35

    +0.82%

  • AZN

    -0.8300

    186.68

    -0.44%

Asteroid dust caused 15-year winter that killed dinosaurs: study
Asteroid dust caused 15-year winter that killed dinosaurs: study / Photo: Jorge GONZALEZ - MUSEO PALEONTOLOGICO EGIDIO FERUGLIO/AFP/File

Asteroid dust caused 15-year winter that killed dinosaurs: study

Around 66 million years ago, an asteroid bigger than Mount Everest smashed into Earth, killing off three quarters of all life on the planet -- including the dinosaurs.

Text size:

This much we know.

But exactly how the impact of the asteroid Chicxulub caused all those animals to go extinct has remained a matter of debate.

The leading theory recently has been that sulphur from the asteroid's impact -- or soot from global wildfires it sparked -- blocked out the sky and plunged the world into a long, dark winter, killing all but the lucky few.

However research published Monday based on particles found at a key fossil site reasserted an earlier hypothesis: that the impact winter was caused by dust kicked up by the asteroid.

Fine silicate dust from pulverised rock would have stayed in the atmosphere for 15 years, dropping global temperatures by up to 15 degrees Celsius, researchers said in a study in the journal Nature Geoscience.

Back in 1980, father-and-son scientists Luis and Walter Alvarez first proposed that the dinosaurs were killed off by an asteroid strike that shrouded the world in dust.

Their claim was initially met with some scepticism -- until a decade later when the massive crater of Chicxulub was found in what is now the Yucatan Peninsula on the Gulf of Mexico.

Now, scientists largely agree that Chicxulub was to blame.

But the idea that it was sulphur, rather than dust, that caused the impact winter has become "very popular" in recent years, Ozgur Karatekin, a researcher at the Royal Observatory of Belgium, told AFP.

Study co-author Karatekin said this was because the dust from the impact was thought to be the wrong size to stay in the atmosphere for long enough.

For the study, the international team of researchers was able to measure dust particles thought to be from right after the asteroid struck.

- 'Catastrophic collapse' -

The particles were found at the Tanis fossil site in the US state of North Dakota.

Though 3,000 kilometres (1,865 miles) away from the crater, the site has preserved a number of remarkable finds believed to be dated from directly after the asteroid impact in sediment layers of an ancient lake.

The dust particles were around 0.8 to 8.0  micrometres -- just the right size to stick around in the atmosphere for up to 15 years, the researchers said.

Entering this data into climate models similar to those used for current-day Earth, the researchers determined that dust likely played a far greater role in the mass extinction than had previously been thought.

Out of all the material that was shot into the atmosphere by the asteroid, they estimated that it was 75 percent dust, 24 percent sulphur and one percent soot.

The dust particles "totally shut down photosynthesis" in plants for at least a year, causing a "catastrophic collapse" of life, Karatekin said.

Sean Gulick, a geophysicist at the University of Texas at Austin and not involved in the research, told AFP that the study was another interesting effort to answer the "hot question" -- what drove the impact winter -- but did not provide the definitive answer.

He emphasised that discovering what happened during the world's last mass extinction event was important not just for understanding the past, but also the future.

"Maybe we can better predict our own mass extinction that we're probably in the middle of," Gulick said.

A.Stransky--TPP