
IMPACT OF
METEORITE, DROP IN SEA LEVEL CAUSED MASS EXTINCTIONS 65
MILLION YEARS AGO
The scientific dispute over what
caused the extinction of 70 percent of all species worldwide
65 million years ago is closer to a resolution, with new
research by scientists from UCLA and the University of
Washington. The research was funded by the National Science
Foundation (NSF).
A cover story in the November 22 issue
of the journal Science reports the researchers' evidence
supporting the controversial theory that the extinction of
dinosaurs and many other species was caused by the impact of
a huge meteorite that crashed to Earth some 65 million years
ago.
"The end-Cretaceous extinction is one
of the largest mass extinctions in Earth's history, and its
cause has been among the most contentious, hotly debated
issues in paleontology," says Chris Maples, program director
in NSF's division of earth sciences. "This work by Marshall
and Ward is important because it may result in more
agreement among proponents of different end-Cretaceous
extinction scenarios."
However, the scientists --
paleontologist Charles Marshall of UCLA and geologist Peter
Ward of the University of Washington in Seattle -- also
present evidence that other factors, including a drop in sea
level prior to the assault by the massive asteroid or comet,
also may have caused some of the extinctions at the end of
what is known as the Cretaceous period. Marshall and Ward
present evidence demonstrating that a combination of factors
caused the mass extinctions.
Marshall applied statistical analysis
to a well-preserved and well-documented fossil record which
Ward has collected - some 40 species of sea creatures from
the Cretaceous period that include clams and squid-like
creatures with shells called ammonites.
"For the first time, we can estimate
the relative importance of all the major factors that led to
the extinction of the ammonites," says Marshall. The impact
of the asteroid or comet accounts for 50 to 75 percent of
the ammonite extinctions, which is a much higher figure than
some scientists had expected, but lower than others
anticipated, he says. The substantial drop in sea level,
which had peaked at least 10,000 years before the comet
struck, accounts for between zero and 25 percent of the
extinctions. In addition, about 25 percent of the
extinctions were due to factors that would have occurred
regardless of the meteorite or the change in sea level --
what scientists call "background extinction."
"Some scientists thought the
extinctions were due solely to the impact of the asteroid or
comet, others thought they were due to the sea level change,
and still others thought that background extinction
accounted for most of the extinctions; we're seeing evidence
that all of them were factors," says Marshall.
Marshall and Ward found evidence for a
decline in the abundance of species, and perhaps the
extinction of more species than would have occurred
normally, during the time sea level dropped substantially.
In addition, the scientists found that there was a mass
extinction of species most likely caused by the impact of
the asteroid or comet.
-NSF-
For links to Event-Based Science
books and pages, return to the EBS homepage:
Event-Based
Science Home Page

Last updated on Thursday, June 19, 2008
<webmaster@eventbasedscience.com>
|