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Astrophysical life extinctions: what killed the dinosaurs?

Geological records indicate that the exponential diversification of marine and continental life on Earth in the past 500 My was interrupted by many life extinctions. They also indicate that the major mass extinctions were correlated in time with large meteoritic impacts, gigantic volcanic eruptions,...

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Autor principal: Dar, Arnon
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: CERN 1999
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/380309
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author Dar, Arnon
author_facet Dar, Arnon
author_sort Dar, Arnon
collection CERN
description Geological records indicate that the exponential diversification of marine and continental life on Earth in the past 500 My was interrupted by many life extinctions. They also indicate that the major mass extinctions were correlated in time with large meteoritic impacts, gigantic volcanic eruptions, sea regressions and drastic changes in global climate. Some of these catastrophes coincided in time. The astrophysical life extinction mechanisms which were proposed so far, in particular, meteoritic impacts, nearby supernova explosions, passage through molecular or dark matter clouds, and Galactic gamma/cosmic ray bursts cannot explain the time coincidences between these catastrophes. However, recent observations suggest that many planetary-mass objects may be present in the outer solar system between the Kuiper belt and the Oort cloud. Gravitational perturbations may occasionally bring them into the inner solar system. Their passage near Earth could have generated gigantic tidal waves, large volcanic eruptions, sea regressions, large meteoritic impacts and drastic changes in global climate and explain the geological records on the major mass extinctions in the past 500 My.
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spelling cern-3803092022-11-02T22:17:01Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/380309engDar, ArnonAstrophysical life extinctions: what killed the dinosaurs?Other Fields of PhysicsGeological records indicate that the exponential diversification of marine and continental life on Earth in the past 500 My was interrupted by many life extinctions. They also indicate that the major mass extinctions were correlated in time with large meteoritic impacts, gigantic volcanic eruptions, sea regressions and drastic changes in global climate. Some of these catastrophes coincided in time. The astrophysical life extinction mechanisms which were proposed so far, in particular, meteoritic impacts, nearby supernova explosions, passage through molecular or dark matter clouds, and Galactic gamma/cosmic ray bursts cannot explain the time coincidences between these catastrophes. However, recent observations suggest that many planetary-mass objects may be present in the outer solar system between the Kuiper belt and the Oort cloud. Gravitational perturbations may occasionally bring them into the inner solar system. Their passage near Earth could have generated gigantic tidal waves, large volcanic eruptions, sea regressions, large meteoritic impacts and drastic changes in global climate and explain the geological records on the major mass extinctions in the past 500 My.CERNoai:cds.cern.ch:3803091999
spellingShingle Other Fields of Physics
Dar, Arnon
Astrophysical life extinctions: what killed the dinosaurs?
title Astrophysical life extinctions: what killed the dinosaurs?
title_full Astrophysical life extinctions: what killed the dinosaurs?
title_fullStr Astrophysical life extinctions: what killed the dinosaurs?
title_full_unstemmed Astrophysical life extinctions: what killed the dinosaurs?
title_short Astrophysical life extinctions: what killed the dinosaurs?
title_sort astrophysical life extinctions: what killed the dinosaurs?
topic Other Fields of Physics
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/380309
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