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"Earth
Impact", Oklahoma Department of Libraries, by Karen Carr
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Controversy
surrounds the extinction of the dinosaurs. According to one theory,
dinosaurs were slowly driven to extinction by environmental changes
linked to the gradual withdrawal of shallow seas from the continents
at the end of the dinosaurian era. Proponents of this theory postulate
that dinosaurs dwindled in number and variety over several million
years.
An opposing
theory proposes that the impact of an asteroid or comet caused catastrophic
destruction of the environment, leading to the extinction of the
dinosaurs. Evidence to support this theory includes the discovery
of a buried impact crater (thought to be the result of a large comet
striking the earth) that is 200 km (124 mi) in diameter in the Yucatán
Peninsula of Mexico. A spray of debris, called an ejecta sheet,
which was blown from the edge of the crater, has been found over
vast regions of North America. Comet-enriched material from the
impact's fiery explosion was distributed all over the world. With
radiometric dating scientists have used the decay rates of certain
atoms to date the crater, ejecta sheet, and fireball layer. Using
similar techniques to date the dramatic changes in the record of
microscopic fossils, they have found that the impact and the dinosaur
extinction occurred nearly simultaneously.
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