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Showing results for tags 'k-t boundary'.
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From the album: Dinosaurs
K-Pg Boundary Microtektites Hell Creek Formation Garfield Co., MT, USA These aren't fossils, but are relevant to the extinction of the non-avian dinosaurs, pterosaurs, large marine reptiles, and many other species of flora/fauna at the end of the Cretaceous. When a large meteor/asteroid struck the earth ~ 66 mya, it sent molten ejecta across the world. Some of this molten material, sourced from the impact site, was shaped by its trajectory through the atmosphere and cooled into small, glassy droplets. The black blobs you see are those droplets, called tektites (each typically ~ 1 mm in diameter). The layer which these came from is more famous for its unusually high concentration of iridium (which is more common in meteorites than on Earth). However, in some locations, tektites have been preserved. In this matrix sample, I've also found carbonized plant material (charcoal), which suggests fires that could be associated with the impact event.- 8 comments
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- cretaceous extinction
- dinosaur extinction
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Cone shaped thing in matrix from Seymour Island, Antarctica
David Cothran posted a topic in Fossil ID
Near the K-T boundary there; below, I think. A solitary rugose coral? But the striations look wrong to me. Loose on surface.- 3 replies
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- antarctica
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Leaf fossils show severe end- Cretaceous plant extinction in Southern Argentina
Thecosmilia Trichitoma posted a topic in Fossil News
The article from Science Daily= https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/01/210105130123.htm The Source Paper= https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/paleobiology/article/cretaceouspaleogene-plant-extinction-and-recovery-in-patagonia/94645848E3BE16AC818320248C725734 (I found this paper to be quite well written, and would recommend you read it too.)-
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- 92% of plant species extinct
- k-t boundary
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Chicxulub Impact Cooled Earth's Climate More than Previously Thought
Oxytropidoceras posted a topic in Fossil News
Asteroid impact plunged dinosaurs into catastrophic 'winter' By Jonathan Amos, BBC, October 31, 2017 http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-41825471 Dinosaur-killing asteroid impact cooled Earth's climate more than previously thought. PhysOrg, October 31, 2017 https://phys.org/news/2017-10-dinosaur-killing-asteroid-impact-cooled-earth.html The paper is: Artemieva, N., et al, 2017, Quantifying the Release of Climate-Active Gases by Large Meteorite Impacts With a Case Study of Chicxulub. Geophysical Research Letters (2017). DOI: 10.1002/2017GL074879 http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/2017GL074879/abstract A related paper is: Pierazzo, E. and Artemieva, N., 2012. Local and global environmental effects of impacts on Earth. Elements, 8(1), pp.55-60. http://users.unimi.it/paleomag/geo2/Pierazzo&Artemieva2012.pdf Yours, Paul H.-
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- chicxulub impact
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K-T boundary, can I see it on land in Australia? Ideally close to Melbourne
chenxchen posted a topic in Geology
I really want to see it, would someone know if there is any site in Australia? Ideally close to Melbourne. Many thanks