An artist’s perspective of the impact that may have offed the dinosaurs. (Image: NASA) |
The demise of the dinosaurs is the stuff of middle school science
classes: everybody knows that a massive meteorite crashed into the Yucatan
Peninsula, setting off a series of calamities. Tsunamis rocked back and forth
across the oceans, a scalding cloud of dust and ash shot outward from the
impact site, and secondary impacts from the initial ejecta ignited forest fires
far from ground zero.
None of this was good news for the charismatic megafauna roaming the
planet 66 million years ago, but it might not have been the only existential
threat on the horizon. Halfway around the world, prodigious volcanic eruptions
were forming the Deccan Traps in modern-day western India. Over tens of
thousands of years, trillions of cubic meters of lava burst onto the Earth’s
surface, ultimately covering 1.5 million square kilometers (an area nearly half
the size of India) with thick layers of basalt. More dangerous than the molten
rock itself was the cocktail of noxious gases that would have accompanied the
explosions. Sulfurous fumes were lofted high into the atmosphere, leading to
rapid global climate change.
While the scientific consensus still places most of the blame for
the Cretaceous-Paleogene mass extinction on the meteorite, the extensive
volcanism likely played a critical role. And now, it seems like the two deadly
forces might actually be linked. Paul Renne, the Director of the Berkeley
Geochronology Center, led a recently
published study that used high-resolution argon isotope dating
techniques to zoom in on the precise timing of the Indian volcanism. In an earlier
study, Renne and colleagues showed that global climate was already
changing drastically by the time the Chicxulub crater formed, and that the
Deccan eruptions began hundreds of thousands of years earlier.
But they may have gone into overdrive with the impact. The team of
geologists found evidence suggesting “that the Chicxulub impact initiated a
substantial acceleration of Deccan volcanism within ~50 thousand years,” the
blink of an eye in geologic time. They propose that, as the meteorite burrowed
into the Earth’s crust, seismic waves propagated outward and downward through
the planet, ultimately reconfiguring the magma conduits that fed the volcanoes
on the Indian subcontinent.
This re-plumbing theoretically could just as easily have constricted
the magma flow and shut the volcanic complex off, but it had the opposite
effect. After the impact-induced “state shift,” roughly 70% of Traps’ total
volume of basalt was erupted, and with it, the gases that absorbed incoming
sunlight. Renne also measured trace element compositions that revealed a
consistent depth of rock melting both before and after the floodgates were
opened, parrying a critique that bigger eruptions were due to a thinning
overlying plate rather than a shock-wave induced re-configuration of the
volcanoes’ conduits.
The notion that supercharged volcanism played a key role in offing
the dinosaurs is no historical anomaly: all other major mass extinctions
coincide with large volcanic deposits. So while the Deccan traps may already
have been well on their way to causing a similar die-off, the Chicxulub
meteorite caused the perfect storm that changed the face of biology forever.
Taken from: www.blogs.discovermagazine.com (written by Jeffrey Marlow)
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