For three years, a team of scientists kept a big secret: They had discovered a giant crater-shaped depression buried beneath about a kilometer of ice in northwestern Greenland. In November, the researchers revealed their find to the world.
They hadn’t set out to find a crater. But in 2015, glaciologists studying ice-penetrating radar images of Greenland’s ice sheet, part of an annual survey by NASA’s Operation IceBridge mission, noticed an oddly rounded shape right at the northern edge of Hiawatha Glacier. If the 31-kilometer-wide depression is confirmed to be the remnant of a meteorite impact — and the team has produced a wealth of evidence suggesting that it is (SN: 12/8/18, p. 6) — the discovery is exciting in and of itself. It’s rare to find a new crater, let alone one on land that has retained its perfect bowl shape.
“This is just a straight-up exciting discovery that starts with this wonderful element of serendipity,” says team member Joseph MacGregor, a glaciologist with Operation IceBridge.
But the crater — let’s call it that, for the sake of discussion — may have also reignited a debate over a controversial hypothesis about a mysterious cold snap known as the Younger Dryas. This cold period began abruptly about 12,800 years ago and ended just as abruptly about 11,700 years ago. For more than a decade, a small group of researchers, unconnected with the group behind the new discovery, has suggested that a cosmic impact triggered the cooling (SN: 7/7/18, p. 18).
Proponents of the Younger Dryas impact hypothesis say that the remnants of a comet exploded in Earth’s atmosphere and that the airbursts sparked wildfires across North America. Soot and other particles from the fires blocked out the sun, causing the cold snap, which has been blamed for everything from the extinction of the mammoths to the disappearance of a group of people known as the Clovis.
Most scientists reject that an impact was responsible, refuting the idea that there were vast wildfires at the time or that the Clovis people even disappeared. Another big objection: the lack of a smoking gun, a crater dating to the onset of the Younger Dryas.
The “mammoth in the room,” therefore, is whether the Greenland crater might be that smoking gun. But a large, recent impact would be extremely unlikely, given the rarity of such impacts on Earth, particularly on land, says planetary scientist Clark Chapman of the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colo., who was not involved with the discovery.
Indeed, one sticking point is that there are no direct dates for the newly discovered crater, because it is still buried beneath all that ice. The radar data offer only tantalizing clues to the age, suggesting that the crater is between 2.6 million and 11,700 years old.
上海花千坊419
That’s a huge time range, but the proponents of the hypothesis are convinced that this crater is what they’ve been waiting for. “I think it’s transformational in terms of convincing a lot of skeptics,” says James Kennett, a geologist at the University of California, Santa Barbara.
There’s another big sticking point when it comes to linking this crater to the impact hypothesis: Instead of a fragment of a comet, the discoverers think the Hiawatha impactor was an iron meteorite. That determination is based on measurements of platinum and other elements in glacial outwash, sediments carried by meltwater from beneath the ice. An iron meteorite impact would probably not produce the kinds of explosive airbursts that could ignite continent-scale wildfires, says Michail Petaev, a geochemist at Harvard University.
Petaev and colleagues previously found a hint that an iron meteorite might have smacked into Greenland about 13,000 years ago. In 2013, his group examined Greenland ice cores and found a strange platinum anomaly dating to right before the Younger Dryas. The ratio of platinum to iridium measured in the ice cores points to an iron meteorite, the team reported.
Despite the platinum data, the impact hypothesis proponents hold firmly to the idea that the Hiawatha impactor was a comet. Because little is known about comet compositions, Kennett says, a comet might well have been the source for the platinum found in the glacial outwash and the ice cores. But Petaev maintains that the observed platinum ratios just wouldn’t occur in a comet, which is made of the primitive stuff of the universe. Instead, he says, those ratios require the cycles of melting and recrystallizing that form iron meteorites, the ancient cores of asteroids or planets.
Glaciologist Kurt Kjær of the University of Copenhagen, who led the team that identified the crater, and his colleagues don’t want to weigh in on the Younger Dryas debate. “We can’t prove it,” Kjær says. “But we can certainly not disprove it.”
Instead, the crater’s discoverers are planning to collect more sediments from the glacial outwash, and perhaps even drill directly into the crater to retrieve sediment cores that can be dated. And there may be other craters lurking beneath Greenland’s ice, or even Antarctica’s — perhaps more easily identifiable once you know what to look for, says MacGregor.
Asked whether the team has actually identified any other round shapes of interest, he pauses. Then MacGregor says, cryptically, “stay tuned.”
相关文章Chinas shipbuilding industry sees marked growth in orders in 2023, leading the worldChinas shipbuilding industry achieved marked growth in 2023, as shipbuilding completions exceeded half of the global total, or reaching 50.2 percent, further solidifying the countrys leading position in the shipbuilding sector, according to data released by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) on Monday. In 2023, Chinas shipbuilding completions totaled 42.32 million deadweight […]
Large-scale public cemetery for Qin people discovered in ShaanxiA large-scale cemetery containing more than 200 tombs was recently discovered in Xianyang, Northwest Chinas Shaanxi Province. The tomb cluster was confirmed to be a burial place for the people of the Qin Dynasty (221BC-206BC). Archaeologists found a total of 237 ancient tombs, excavated in Xianyangs Jiantan village, dated from the late Warring States Period […]
Neandertal kids were a lot like kids today — at least in how they grewA Neandertal child whose partial skeleton dates to around 49,000 years ago grew at the same pace as children do today, with a couple of exceptions. Growth of the child’s spine and brain lagged, a new study finds. It’s unclear, though, whether developmental slowing in those parts of the body applied only to Neandertals or […]
In the deep ocean, these bacteria play a key role in trapping carbonA mysterious group of microbes may be controlling the fate of carbon in the dark depths of the world’s oceans. Nitrospinae bacteria, which use the nitrogen compound nitrite to “fix” inorganic carbon dioxide into sugars and other compounds for food and reproduction, are responsible for 15 to 45 percent of such carbon fixation in the […]
还没有评论,来说两句吧...