Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Earth United States

35 Million-Year-Old Asteroid Left a Trail of Destruction Across the Eastern US (space.com) 36

schwit1 shares a report from Space.com: About 35 million years ago, an asteroid traveling nearly 144,000 mph (231,000 km/h) smashed into the Atlantic Ocean near the modern-day town of Cape Charles, Virginia. The space rock vaporized instantly, but its impact triggered a gargantuan tsunami, cast up a monsoon of shattered rocks and molten glass that spanned hundreds of miles and carved out the single largest crater in the United States -- the so-called Chesapeake Bay impact structure. Today, that 25-mile-wide (40 kilometers) crater is buried half a mile below the rocky basement of Chesapeake Bay -- the 200-mile-long (320 km) estuary linking Virginia and Maryland on the East Coast. That hasn't stopped scientists from trying to piece together the site's mysterious history since it was first discovered during a drilling project in 1990.

In a recent study of ocean sediment cores taken almost 250 miles (400 km) northeast of the impact site, researchers found traces of radioactive debris dating to the time of the strike, providing fresh evidence of the impact's age and destructive power. In their recent study (published in the journal Meteoritics and Planetary Science), researchers from Arizona State University dated 21 microscopic shards of zircon -- a durable gemstone that can survive underground for billions of years. These zircons were lodged in a sediment core taken from roughly 2,150 feet (655 meters) below the Atlantic Ocean. Not only is zircon commonly found in tektites, but it is also a choice mineral for radiometric dating, thanks to some of its radioactive elemental components. In this case, the researchers used a dating technique called uranium-thorium-helium dating, which looks at how radioactive isotopes, or versions, of uranium and thorium decay into helium. The team found that the 21 crystals ranged widely in age, running the gamut from about 33 million to 300 million years old. The two youngest samples, which had an average age of about 35 million years old, fit in with previous studies' estimates for the time of the Chesapeake Bay impact.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

35 Million-Year-Old Asteroid Left a Trail of Destruction Across the Eastern US

Comments Filter:
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Can we get another one in time for the 2020 election?

  • by cruff ( 171569 ) on Tuesday August 20, 2019 @07:39AM (#59105044)
    Space.com pops up a page that ironically says that "while we don't mind you running an ad blocker", then proceeds to claim otherwise by completely obscuring the article page.
    • by quenda ( 644621 ) on Tuesday August 20, 2019 @07:50AM (#59105062)

      Space.com pops up a page that ironically says that "while we don't mind you running an ad blocker", then proceeds to claim otherwise by completely obscuring the article page.

      I just had to click "continue with adblocker". But then I saw a mindbogglingly stupid stock image of some idiot graphic artist's impression of what a meteorite impact looks like. I wish it had stayed obscured.

    • Besides an adblocker I really recommend an auto overlay remover. It stops those annoying boxes that want your email address every time you visit a site. You have to whitelist some sites but totally worth the trouble.

    • Me too, so they got the usual treatment. Click uBlock Origin icon, click the </> icon on its menu to disable scripting, then reload page. Then also delete all space.com cookies and deny permission to ever store a cookie for them again.

      You fuck with my adblocker, you get even more blocked than my usual rather gracious and bend-over-backwards-permissive defaults. That's just how it has to be. You'd have to be crazy to be more permissive than I am, and most people would think I already allow far too muc

    • They're like a passive-aggresive parent. "You're free to wear whatever you want to school. But do you really need to wear THAT?"

    • I'm not seeing that, but it's a common tactic. It usually means that you've set NoScript to "Temporarily set top-level sites to TRUSTED" and in order to see the article you just need to block the top-level site. (Manually set to UNTRUSTED.)

      Or it means you're running an ad-blocker. I dunno.
  • "As reported by University of Arizona researching, Republican President Donald Trump (R) failed to stop the giant asteroid which devastated a large section of the United States' east coast. FEMA, the Federal agency in charge of emergency response to natural disasters which reports to Republic President Donald Trump (R), a known racist, failed to assist a single victim of this calamity. Scientists report it may take billions of years for the planet to recover and the impact is likely to have had an effect
    • Re: (Score:2, Offtopic)

      First, what the fuck does any of this have to do with the Orange Man? Some people's (you) obsession with this guy goes even beyond the extreme right's obsession with Obama. It's unhealthy, and you should seek help - not only for your own well being, but for those around you. Maybe this is another symptom of dismantling mental health services in the US?

      Second, it was Arizona State University doing the research that this article is about, not the University of Arizona. I know they both have the word "Ariz

      • Relax, son, it was a joke. Laugh. Or if you didn't find it funny, don't laugh. But don't have a cow. And I thought the renaming of the school was the most subtle and brilliant part. Should I explain that part? Sigh.... But there you have it. Welcome to slashdot, the last refuge on the internet of the humorless ADHD OCD nerd. At least -someone- was smart enough to tag it as funny. Honestly, I was hoping for a +5 funny but I'll take your explosive diarrhea triggering as a win, instead. Have a nice
      • OK wise guy, want to point out where Tuscon is?
  • So TFA says they found 21 shards of zircon, out of which 2 were of similar age. So, by my understanding, they used 10% of the samples (only the convenient ones) to confirm their theory? Isn't this confirmation bias?

    • by pz ( 113803 ) on Tuesday August 20, 2019 @08:32AM (#59105152) Journal

      You're asking if the noise inherent in the measurement is approximately the same as the noise across the samples in this case. Or, to put it another way, you are wondering if the two non-matching samples should be considered outliers and ignored.

      I have a good friend (no, really) who builds the machines that do exactly this sort of radiological dating. The size of a dinner table, they cost upwards of USD 100,000 installed and are precision scientific instruments. They take single grains of zircon (or other material), laser ablate them under high vacuum, and give you the elemental composition via mass spectrometry. Used properly, the noise in their results is far, far lower than across these samples.

      The reason zircon is used is because it tends to trap He4 nuclei that are given off during radioisotope decay, such as U/Th under certain circumstances, such as -- and this is the key point -- when the zircon is below about 90C. It's widely assumed that the thermal shock from a meteor impact will heat zircons well above that thermal barrier, allowing all entrapped He4 to escape, resetting the U/Th decay clock. After the thermal shock, U/Th decay chain continues, slowly releasing more He4 which is trapped after the grains cool down, allowing the slow buildup to provide an indicator of the time since cooling. Measurements of this and similar phenomena have created the field of geothermochronology, yielding a vast trove of interesting results. It's given my friend a pretty comfortable living, too, building and installing these machines in universities across the globe.

    • I took that to mean that some of the samples were from earlier impacts or other sources. The presence of two samples from about 35 million years ago supports the theory of an impact at that time. The presence of samples from other impacts does not detract from that.

  • I just wanted to note that our local tradition of leaving a trail of destruction up and down the east coast is older than we knew...
  • I would think that an event like this would alter the biosphere of Earth as well as the local flora/fauna of the impact site.

    TFA only talks about the geological impact but I would think there would be some pretty spectacular impact on the plants and animals (as well as the climate) that should be investigates as well.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    It's called uranium-thorium-helium dating, but you need to get out of the basement to be eligible.

  • Here's the dickhead again, complaining:

    Article about an Encarta CD from 25 years ago.
    Article about mining crypto on 40 year old Apple II.
    Article about an asteroid from 35 million years ago.
    Tomorrow news from the big bang.

    Stuff that matters.

  • by WoodstockJeff ( 568111 ) on Tuesday August 20, 2019 @11:55AM (#59105860) Homepage

    ...how old the asteroid was when it "died"? Or was the headline writer just brain dead when writing it?

"Gravitation cannot be held responsible for people falling in love." -- Albert Einstein

Working...