Kennett Douglas J, Kennett James P, West Allen, West G James, Bunch Ted E, Culleton Brendan J, Erlandson Jon M, Que Hee Shane S, Johnson John R, Mercer Chris, Shen Feng, Sellers Marilee, Stafford Thomas W, Stich Adrienne, Weaver James C, Wittke James H, Wolbach Wendy S
Department of Anthropology and Museum of Natural and Cultural History, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2009 Aug 4;106(31):12623-8. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0906374106. Epub 2009 Jul 20.
The long-standing controversy regarding the late Pleistocene megafaunal extinctions in North America has been invigorated by a hypothesis implicating a cosmic impact at the Allerød-Younger Dryas boundary or YDB (approximately 12,900 +/- 100 cal BP or 10,900 +/- 100 (14)C years). Abrupt ecosystem disruption caused by this event may have triggered the megafaunal extinctions, along with reductions in other animal populations, including humans. The hypothesis remains controversial due to absence of shocked minerals, tektites, and impact craters. Here, we report the presence of shock-synthesized hexagonal nanodiamonds (lonsdaleite) in YDB sediments dating to approximately 12,950 +/- 50 cal BP at Arlington Canyon, Santa Rosa Island, California. Lonsdaleite is known on Earth only in meteorites and impact craters, and its presence strongly supports a cosmic impact event, further strengthened by its co-occurrence with other nanometer-sized diamond polymorphs (n-diamonds and cubics). These shock-synthesized diamonds are also associated with proxies indicating major biomass burning (charcoal, carbon spherules, and soot). This biomass burning at the Younger Dryas (YD) onset is regional in extent, based on evidence from adjacent Santa Barbara Basin and coeval with broader continent-wide biomass burning. Biomass burning also coincides with abrupt sediment mass wasting and ecological disruption and the last known occurrence of pygmy mammoths (Mammuthus exilis) on the Channel Islands, correlating with broader animal extinctions throughout North America. The only previously known co-occurrence of nanodiamonds, soot, and extinction is the Cretaceous-Tertiary (K/T) impact layer. These data are consistent with abrupt ecosystem change and megafaunal extinction possibly triggered by a cosmic impact over North America at approximately 12,900 +/- 100 cal BP.
关于北美洲晚更新世巨型动物灭绝的长期争议,因一个涉及在阿勒罗德-新仙女木边界(或YDB,约12900±100校准年BP或10900±100碳-14年)发生宇宙撞击的假说而再次兴起。这一事件导致的生态系统突然破坏,可能引发了巨型动物的灭绝,以及包括人类在内的其他动物种群数量的减少。由于缺乏冲击矿物、玻璃陨石和撞击坑,该假说仍存在争议。在此,我们报告在加利福尼亚州圣罗莎岛阿灵顿峡谷的YDB沉积物中存在冲击合成的六方纳米金刚石(朗斯代尔石),其年代可追溯到约12950±50校准年BP。朗斯代尔石在地球上仅在陨石和撞击坑中被发现,它的存在有力地支持了一次宇宙撞击事件,与其他纳米尺寸的金刚石多晶型物(n-金刚石和立方金刚石)共存进一步强化了这一观点。这些冲击合成的金刚石还与表明大规模生物量燃烧的指标相关(木炭、碳球粒和烟灰)。基于来自相邻圣巴巴拉盆地的证据,新仙女木期开始时的这种生物量燃烧在区域范围内发生,并且与更广泛的全大陆生物量燃烧同时出现。生物量燃烧还与沉积物突然大量流失和生态破坏以及海峡群岛上最后已知的侏儒猛犸(Mammuthus exilis)出现时间相吻合,这与整个北美洲更广泛的动物灭绝相关。此前已知纳米金刚石、烟灰和灭绝唯一同时出现的情况是在白垩纪-古近纪(K/T)撞击层。这些数据与约12900±100校准年BP时可能由一次宇宙撞击引发的北美洲生态系统突然变化和巨型动物灭绝相一致。