JACKIE FAHERTY (Senior Scientist, Division of Physical Sciences, American Museum of Natural History): How do we know an asteroid hit Earth 66 million years ago?
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FAHERTY: Here at the American Museum of Natural History, we’re pretty well known for two things, and that’s space and dinosaurs. And there’s one unifying tie between the two. 66 million years ago there’s very strong evidence that a giant asteroid hit the Earth and caused a mass amount of change on this planet which led to the extinction of the dinosaurs.
How do we know that happened? Well in the 1980s, a geologist named Walter Alvarez uncovered, with the help, actually of his physicist, Nobel Prize-winning father, that right at the K-Pg boundary which was the point of dinosaurs’ extinction, you had a particularly strong amount of whats called iridium. And iridium, which is atomic number 77 on your periodic table, is mostly found in high quantities in asteroids. In the Earth we can find it but it’s locked further down in the Earth. When you find a lot of iridium, that’s a bit of a smoking gun that you’ve got the signature of an asteroid impact. So the theory was put out there that an asteroid impact was the reason that the dinosaurs were extinct.
So if something hits you would expect there to be a crater. Now around the same time that the theory was put out there, there were oil exploration surveys that were ongoing in the Yucatan Peninsula. By chance, they uncovered what’s now called the Chicxulub Impact Basin which is the right size and had the right chemical composition around it that we think that that is the site of the giant impact that led to the extinction of the dinosaurs.
The thing is that asteroids or parts of asteroids, dust of an asteroid, we actually get hit by it all the time. Anytime you see a shooting star, you’re seeing a bit of a piece of rock that’s burning up in your atmosphere. The ones that we worry about are the big ones. The one that knocked out the dinosaurs was six miles in diameter. That kind of impact – it happens, but it’s far more rare. And unlike the dinosaurs, astronomers are ready and watching for one that might be hazardous.
If you want to hear more about what exactly the asteroid did to the dinosaurs, then click here and hear from Team Dinos on the asteroid and dinosaurs themselves. Thanks everybody for watching, tune in for more videos where Team Space will yet again take out Team Dinosaur.