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Possible world-wide middle miocene iridium anomaly and its relationship to periodicity of impacts and extinctionsIn a study of one million years of Middle Miocene sediment deposition in ODP Hole 689B in the Weddell Sea near Antarctica, a single iridium (Ir) anomaly of 44 (+ or - 10) x 10 to the 12th gram Ir per gram rock (ppt) was observed in core 6H, section 3, 50 to 60 cm, after background contributions associated with manganese precipitates and clay are subtracted. The ODP Hole 689B is 10,000 km away from another site, DSDP Hole 588B in the Tasman Sea north of New Zealand, where a single Ir anomaly of 144 + or - 7 ppt over a background of 11 ppt was found in an earlier study of 3 million years of deposition. From chemical measurements the latter deposition was thought to be impact-related. Ir measurements were made, following neutron activation, with the Iridium Coincidence Spectrometer. The age vs depth calibration curves given in the DSDP and ODP preliminary reports indicate the ages of the Iranomalies are identical, 11.7 million years, but the absolute and relative uncertainties in the curves are not known. Based on the newest age data the age estimate is 10 million years. As the Ir was deposited at the two sites at about the same time and they are one quarter of the way around the world from each other it seems likely that the deposition was world-wide. The impact of a large asteroid or comet could produce the wide distribution, and this data is supportive of the impact relationship deduced for Deep Sea Drilling Project (DSDP) 588B from the chemical evidence. If the surface densities of Ir at the two sites are representative of the world-wide average, the diameter of a Cl type asteroid containing the necessary Ir would be 3 + or - 1 km, which is large enough to cause world-wide darkness and hence extinctions although the latter point is disputed.
Document ID
19890011920
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Asaro, F.
(California Univ. Berkeley. Lawrence Berkeley Lab, CA, United States)
Alvarez, W.
(California Univ. Berkeley. Lawrence Berkeley Lab, CA, United States)
Michel, H. V.
(California Univ. Berkeley. Lawrence Berkeley Lab, CA, United States)
Alvarez, L. W.
(California Univ. Berkeley. Lawrence Berkeley Lab, CA, United States)
Anders, Mark H.
(California Univ. Berkeley. Lawrence Berkeley Lab, CA, United States)
Montanari, A.
(California Univ. Berkeley. Lawrence Berkeley Lab, CA, United States)
Kennett, James P.
(California Univ. Berkeley. Lawrence Berkeley Lab, CA, United States)
Date Acquired
September 5, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1988
Publication Information
Publication: Lunar and Planetary Inst., Global Catastrophes in Earth History: An Interdisciplinary Conference on Impacts, Volcanism, and Mass Mortality
Subject Category
Geophysics
Accession Number
89N21291
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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