The asteroid impact connection of planetary evolution : with special reference to large Precambrian and Australian impacts
著者
書誌事項
The asteroid impact connection of planetary evolution : with special reference to large Precambrian and Australian impacts
(SpringerBriefs in Earth sciences)
Springer, c2013
- : pbk
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注記
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
When in 1981 Louis and Walter Alvarez, the father and son team, unearthed a tell-tale Iridium-rich sedimentary horizon at the 65 million years-old Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary at Gubbio, Italy, their find heralded a paradigm shift in the study of terrestrial evolution. Since the 1980s the discovery and study of asteroid impact ejecta in the oldest well-preserved terrains of Western Australia and South Africa, by Don Lowe, Gary Byerly, Bruce Simonson, Scott Hassler, the author and others, and the documentation of new exposed and buried impact structures in several continents, have led to a resurgence of the idea of the catastrophism theory of Cuvier, previously largely supplanted by the uniformitarian theory of Hutton and Lyell. Several mass extinction of species events are known to have occurred in temporal proximity to large asteroid impacts, global volcanic eruptions and continental splitting. Likely links are observed between asteroid clusters and the 580 Ma acritarch radiation, end-Devonian extinction, end-Triassic extinction and end-Jurassic extinction. New discoveries of ~3.5 - 3.2 Ga-old impact fallout units in South Africa have led Don Lowe and Gary Byerly to propose a protracted prolongation of the Late Heavy Bombardment (~3.95-3.85 Ga) in the Earth-Moon system. Given the difficulty in identifying asteroid impact ejecta units and buried impact structures, it is likely new discoveries of impact signatures are in store, which would further profoundly alter models of terrestrial evolution.
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目次
1. A paradigm shift in Earth science
2. Encounters in space
3. Lunar impacts and the Late Heavy Bombardment (LHB) in the Earth-Moon system.
4. Impact cratering and ejecta dynamics
5. Identification of impact structures
6. Impact ejecta and fallout units
7. Extraterrestrial geochemical, isotopic and mineralogical signatures
8. Precambrian asteroid impacts
9. Very large impact structures
10. Asteroid impact clusters and isotopic age peaks
11. Australian large asteroid impact and possible impact structures
12. Impacts and mass extinctions
13. Uniformitarian models and the role of asteroid impacts in Earth evolution.
14. The current danger
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