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Tuesday, August 31, 2010

“Dinosaurs wiped out by meteor shower lasting ages - New Kerala”

“Dinosaurs wiped out by meteor shower lasting ages - New Kerala”


Dinosaurs wiped out by meteor shower lasting ages - New Kerala

Posted: 30 Aug 2010 07:24 AM PDT

London, Aug 30 : Dinosaurs may have been wiped out from the earth 65 million years ago by a meteor shower which lasted thousands of years, according to new evidences.

Scientists had identified a giant Chicxulub crater in the Gulf of Mexico as the site of a single meteor strike thought to have obliterated prehistoric life on earth.

But evidence for a second impact in Ukraine, dating back thousands of years before the Chicxulub impact, has raised the possibility that the dinosaurs may have been blitzed with a shower of meteorites, The Telegraph reported.

The Boltysh Crater in Ukraine was first discovered in 2002. But experts have unearthed a second cavity within the crater which they believe was caused by the aftermath of the Chicxulub impact - suggesting that the two meteor strikes occurred years apart as part of a wider "shower".

Scientists dated the two Boltysh impact zones by examining the pollen and spores of fossil plants in the layers of mud within.

Ferns are among the first plants to colonise a devastated landscape after a catastrophe, leaving layers of spores - dubbed "fern spikes" - which are considered good markers of past impact events.

The researchers found a second "fern spike" one meter above the first in the Boltysh crater - suggesting that two separate strikes occurred thousands of years apart.

"We interpret this second layer as the aftermath of the Chicxulub impact. It is quite possible that in the future we will find evidence for more impact events," said Simon Kelley of the Open University, who co-authored the study.

Monica Grady, a meteorite expert at the Open University, said the shower could have been caused by "the collision of Near Earth Objects".

The US space agency NASA has recently launched a programme "Spaceguard" which aims to monitor such Near Earth Objects as an early warning system of possible future collisions.

The new findings are published in the journal Geology by a team lead by Professor David Jolley of Aberdeen University.

--IANS

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