Artigo Revisado por pares

The K/T mass extinction, Chicxulub and the impact-kill effect

1998; EDP Sciences; Volume: 169; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês

ISSN

1777-5817

Autores

Gerta Keller, Liangquan Li, Wolfgang Stinnesbeck, Edward P. Vicenzi,

Tópico(s)

Geological and Geochemical Analysis

Resumo

The Chicxulub structure on Yucatan is now commonly believed to have been formed by the Cretaceous/Tertiary (K/T) boundary bolide impact that caused the catastrophic extinction of organisms from dinosaurs to microplankton. However, the mass extinction began well before the K/T boundary and the kill-effect that may be directly attributed to a K/T impact is relatively small (only planktonic foraminifera and nannoplankton affected), highly selective (only tropical-subtropical species extinct) and restricted to low latitudes. Moreover, key evidence cited in support of Chicxulub as K/T impact crater is still controversial (e.g., impact origin of glass), or contradictory : the so-called impact-generated megatsunami in northeastern Mexico contain burrowing horizons that indicate deposition occurred over an extended period of time. This database suggests a multi-event scenario that includes a pre-K/T event (impact or volcanism) that formed the spherule deposits in northeastern Mexico and a K/T event (Ir anomaly, mass extinction) with both events coinciding with climatic and sea level fluctuations during the last 200-300 kyr of the Maastrichtian.

Referência(s)