dijous, 23 de gener del 2020

Oldest impact crater on Earth found and it could throw light on ancient climate change

It's the oldest impact crater on Earth

A huge impact crater in Australia has been confirmed as the world’s oldest, and it could throw light on rapid ancient climate change. 
The huge Yarrabubba crater has been dated to 2.229 billion years ago in a new geological study. 
The time of the impact coincided with Earth’s recovery from an ice age known as ‘Snowball Earth’, where most of Earth’s surface was covered with ice sheets up to three miles thick. 
NASA and Curtin University researchers collected samples of minerals called zircon and monazite from the Yarrabubba crater in the Western Australian outback.
 They then analysed the amount of uranium and lead in the minerals found in those samples. The extreme temperatures and pressures associated with an asteroid strike causes minerals to lose their accumulated lead, resetting the ‘clock’. 
So, by knowing the amount of uranium and how long it takes to decay, they calculated that the crater is 2.229 billion years old, plus or minus five million years.
The team realised that the new, more precise date of the impact meant that most of the Earth, including Australia, was covered with thick ice sheets at the time.
They also realised the impact came shortly before the global ice age ended, when the Earth began to warm (at 2.225 billion years, plus or minus three million years).
Dr Thomas Davison, of Imperial’s Department of Earth Science and Engineering, recreated the impact using computer simulations.
Dr Davison digitally recreated the same scenario believed to have happened at the time.
He modelled four mile wide asteroid striking an ice sheet between two and five kilometres thick at 10 miles per second. 
The simulated asteroid strike unleashed over 100 billion tonnes of water vapour into the atmosphere.
The researchers say that if the simulations are accurate, the released water vapour could have trapped heat in the stratosphere and created a short-term greenhouse effect.
In turn, this might have triggered or contributed toward global warming – and the end of Snowball Earth.
Dr Davison said: “Snowball Earth ended at almost the same time as the Yarrabubba impact. Is this a coincidence, or could the Yarrabubba impact event be an unexpected cause of global climate change?”

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