Rock composition rather impact size sets how deadly meteorite is + 6th & final era of

#1
C C Offline
The Universe is already in its sixth and final era
https://bigthink.com/starts-with-a-bang/...final-era/

KEY POINTS: From cosmic inflation to a primordial particle soup to the expanding, cooling aftermath, the Universe went through many important stages in our cosmic history.

About 6 billion years ago, however, a new form of energy began to dominate the Universe's expansion: dark energy, which now determines our cosmic fate.

The era we're living in, where dark energy dominates the Universe's expansion, is the final one our Universe will ever experience. Here's why we're already living through the beginning of the ultimate end... (MORE - details)


Size doesn’t matter: Rock composition determines how deadly a meteorite impact is
https://www.liverpool.ac.uk/research/new...impact-is/

RELEASE: A new study has found that the minerology of the rocks that a meteorite hits, rather than the size of the impact, determines how deadly an impact it will have. The earth has been bombarded by meteorites throughout its long history. Meteorite impacts generate atmospheric dust and cover the Earth’s surface with debris and have long been considered as a trigger of mass extinctions through Earth’s history.

A multidisciplinary research team from the University of Liverpool and the Instituto Tecnológico y de Energías Renovables, Tenerife with expertise in palaeontology, asteroid stratigraphy, mineralogy, cloud microphysics and climate modelling, sought to explore why some meteorites have caused mass extinctions, for example the K/Pg Chixulclub impact that killed off dinosaurs, yet many which are larger in size have not.

They analysed 44 impacts over the past 600 million years using a new method: assessing the mineral content of the dust ejected into the atmosphere upon impact. Their findings, published in the Journal of the Geological Society of London, reveal that meteorites that hit rocks rich in potassium feldspar (a common and rather benign mineral) always correspond with a mass extinction episode, irrespective of size.

Potassium feldspar is non-toxic. However, it is a powerful ice-nucleating mineral aerosol that strongly affects cloud dynamics, which makes them let through more solar radiation. This in turn warms up the planet and changes the climate. The atmosphere also becomes more sensitive to warming from greenhouse gas emissions, such as large volcanic eruptions.

Liverpool sedimentologist, Dr Chris Stevenson, from the University’s school of Earth, Ocean and Ecological Sciences co-authored the study.

He said: “For decades scientists have puzzled over why some meteorites cause mass extinctions, and others, even really big ones, don’t. It’s surprising when we put together the data: life carried on as normal during the 4th largest impact with a crater diameter of ~48 km, whereas an impact half the size was associated with a mass extinction only 5 million years ago.

“Many kill mechanisms have been proposed, such as large volcanic eruptions, but just like meteorites, these don’t always correlate with mass extinctions. Using this new method for assessing the mineral content of the meteorite ejecta blankets, we show that every time a meteorite, big or small, hits rocks rich in potassium feldspar it correlates with a mass extinction event.

“This opens up a whole new avenue of research: what exactly kills off life during these episodes, and how long do the potassium feldspar effects last? Until now, only meteorites have changed the aerosol regime of the climate. However, present day human activities represent a similar mechanism with increasing emissions of mineral aerosols into the atmosphere.”

The paper `Meteorites that produce K-feldspar-rich ejecta blankets correspond to mass extinctions’ is published in the Geological Society of London.
Reply


Possibly Related Threads…
Thread Author Replies Views Last Post
  Research Impact hypothesis: Early Earth did not have the components for life C C 0 177 Sep 9, 2025 08:26 PM
Last Post: C C
  Article Meteorite that struck Atlanta residence is older than Earth, study finds C C 0 241 Aug 11, 2025 06:09 PM
Last Post: C C
  Article How did Earth get such a strange moon? Exploring the giant impact theory C C 0 462 Mar 18, 2025 08:15 PM
Last Post: C C
  Asteroid Impact Probability Rising Yazata 3 731 Feb 20, 2025 10:48 PM
Last Post: stryder
  Article How do merging supermassive black holes pass the final parsec? C C 0 687 Oct 24, 2024 07:26 PM
Last Post: C C
  Article Forbidden planets + Giant impact made Earth’s ocean boil but also helped early life C C 0 310 Dec 21, 2023 01:53 AM
Last Post: C C
  Bennu - a new era in space exploration + Swarm of 10,000 black holes migrated C C 14 3,168 Oct 24, 2023 06:54 PM
Last Post: C C
  NASA Meteorite Page Yazata 0 233 Feb 17, 2023 03:33 AM
Last Post: Yazata
  Mars satellite films amazing scene + Confirming the Big Bang’s 5th & final prediction C C 0 362 Oct 15, 2022 08:01 PM
Last Post: C C
  Ground telescopes capture jaw-dropping views of DART asteroid impact C C 0 318 Sep 28, 2022 04:26 PM
Last Post: C C



Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)