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Periodic cometary showers: Real or imaginary?Since the initial reports in 1980, a considerable body of chemical and physical evidence has been accumulated to indicate that a major impact event occurred on earth 65 million years ago. The effects of this event were global in extent and have been suggested as the cause of the sudden demise or mass extinction of a large percentage of life, including the dinosaurs, at the end of the geologic time period known as the Cretaceous. Recent statistical analyses of extinctions in the marine faunal record for the last 250 million years have suggested that mass extinctions may occur with a periodicity of every 26 to 30 million years. Following these results, other workers have attempted to demonstrate that these extinction events, like that at the end of the Cretaceous, are temporally correlated with large impact events. A recent scenario suggests that they are the result of periodic showers of comets produced by either the passage of the solar system through the galactic plane or by perturbations of the cometary cloud in the outer solar system by a, as yet unseen, solar companion. This hypothesized solar companion has been given the name Nemesis.
Document ID
19850018244
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Grieve, R. A. F.
(Dept. of Energy Mines and Resources, Ottawa, United States)
Sharpton, V. L.
(Dept. of Energy Mines and Resources, Ottawa, United States)
Goodacre, A. K.
(Dept. of Energy Mines and Resources, Ottawa, United States)
Garvin, J. B.
(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, MD, United States)
Date Acquired
August 12, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1985
Publication Information
Publication: Lunar and Planetary Inst. 16th Lunar and Planetary Sci. Conf.
Subject Category
Astrophysics
Accession Number
85N26555
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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