More Evidence Supports Massive Asteroid Strike
InnerPeace Volunteers writes "From a BBC Sci/Tech article: The idea is that a giant asteroid about 10 kilometres wide, travelling at 90,000 km/hour slammed into the Earth at the southern margin of North America. This was a case of global devastation rather than North American catastrophe. The asteroid devastated pretty much everything."
If this were the only evidence, you'd be right. When the impact hypothesis was first fielded, most scientists just said "Interesting; where's your evidence?" But over a couple of decades, geologists and paleontologists have done lots and lots of testing on strata around the world of that age. They keep turning up more and more data that is "consistent with" the impact hypothesis, and nothing that convincingly debunks it. By now, the evidence is overwhelming, so what was a weak hypothesis has elevated to a mostly-accepted theory.
Nowadays, if the face of so much consistent evidence, you'd have to have some really spectacular counter-evidence to be taken seriously. There are still scientists out there trying to debunk the idea, of course, but mostly they just keep turning up more evidence in favor of the impact. That's what this story was. One more of a chain of hundreds of findings that support the general idea of a major impact 65 million years ago.
Has anyone found strata anywhere that is well-dated and continuous across the 65-million-year age that doesn't show a thin anomalous layer and a radical change of fossils?
(Yes, there are continuous strata of around that age that can't be firmly dated. There are also strata that straddle the date but can't be shown to be continuous. None of these is evidence pro or con the impact.)
What does it have to do with nerd news? Well one thing that a few people have been pushing is funding for equipment and people to do a thorough study and census of small objects in the solar system. There could be such an object aimed to hit us Real Soon Now. We don't know. The sooner we can spot such things, the sooner we can do something to deflect them. If we don't, well, one of them will hit the Earth eventually. Maybe it'll hit next week; maybe it'll hit 30 million years from now.
There are roughly a thousand objects now known of km-size or greater that cross the Earth's orbit. None of the known objects will hit the Earth within a century or so. But we have no idea how many more may be out there.
We nerds are just the ones to find them. And knowledge of earlier disasters is one of the best ways to pry funding out of governments agencies.
Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.