Asteroid impact, volcanoes pushed dinos to extinction

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Offline russellmitu

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Asteroid impact, volcanoes pushed dinos to extinction
« on: October 03, 2015, 02:36:00 PM »
It has been a bone of contention between dinosaur experts for the past 35 years -did dinosaurs become extinct as a result of a massive asteroid impact or were they snuffed out by stupendous volcanic eruptions? The answer is both, according to the latest study into the controversy.

Scientists have found that huge supervolcanoes known as the Deccan Traps, in what is now northern India, doubled their eruptions within about 50,000 years of the Earth being hit by a giant asteroid about 66 million years ago -both events combining to deliver a lethal double whammy to the stricken dinosaurs. Although 50,000 years sounds a long time, it is a mere blink of the eye in geological history . It means that both the asteroid and the supervolcanoes most likely led to a huge global climate disturbance that killed off not just the dinosaurs but many other forms of terrestrial and marine life, scientists said.

The study, published in the journal Science, suggests that the impact of the asteroid or comet, which caused a huge crater 180km wide off the coast of Mexico, triggered an abrupt change in to the underground "plumbing" of the Deccan Traps, which led to far more destructive eruptions for tens of thousands of years.

"Based on our dating of the lavas we can be pretty certain that the volcanism and the impact occurred within 50,000 years of the extinction, so it becomes somewhat artificial to distinguish between them as killing mechanisms. Both phenomena were clearly at work at the same time," said Paul Renne of the University of California, Berkeley . "It is going to be basically impossible to ascribe actual atmospheric effects to one or the other. They both happened at the same time," professor Renne said. A giant asteroid impact and series of immense volcanic eruptions would each eject massive quantities of noxious gases and debris into the atmosphere around the world, which would cut out sunlight for hundreds or thousands of years causing global climate change affecting life on both land and sea.
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