The dinosaur-killing asteroid hit in the northern hemisphere's spring time

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Artistic reconstruction by Joschua Knüppe
Artistic reconstruction by Joschua Knüppe

The asteroid which killed the dinosaurs hit in the northern hemisphere's springtime according to international researchers. The team studied the remains of filter-feeding sturgeons and paddlefishes that died en masse when the asteroid hit, looking at the growth patterns inside well-preserved fossil bones combined with carbon isotope data. Their results suggest that the fish died in the Northern Hemisphere's spring. The team was also able to show that the fish had impact debris lodged in their gills but not further down in their digestive systems, indicating that they had died almost instantly. The researchers say that the spring timing of this catastrophic impact would have coincided with a particularly sensitive stage for the many Northern Hemisphere species that reproduced and had developing offspring during the spring. Southern Hemisphere ecosystems, which were struck during autumn, appear to have recovered up to twice as fast as those in the Northern Hemisphere, the authors note.

Media release

From: Springer Nature

Evolution: The end of the dinosaur era pinpointed in spring *IMAGES* *PRESS BRIEFING* 

The Chicxulub asteroid impact that ended the Mesozoic era, the age of the dinosaurs, occurred at springtime in the Northern Hemisphere, a Nature study suggests. The finding helps to explain the pattern of extinctions that ensued, and adds to our understanding of this pivotal moment in the Earth’s history.

Around 66 million years ago, a large asteroid crashed into what is now the Yucatán Peninsula in Mexico, creating a mass extinction event that killed 76% of all species, including non-avian dinosaurs, pterosaurs and ammonites. Studies looking at the timing of this event have focused on millennial timescales, leaving the season of the impact unknown. To resolve this issue, Melanie During and colleagues studied the remains of filter-feeding sturgeons and paddlefishes that died en masse that day. Distinct three-dimensional growth patterns were observed inside the well-preserved fossil bones, providing a record of seasonal change. Combined with carbon isotope data, these results suggest that the fish died in the Northern Hemisphere spring.

The fish were found at a Late Cretaceous deposit in North Dakota. They had impact debris lodged in their gills, but nowhere further down the digestive system, suggesting an almost-instant death that occurred when an impact-triggered seiche (continental water shaken by the impact) caused a sudden upriver surge. The spring timing of this catastrophic impact would have coincided with a particularly sensitive stage for the many Northern Hemisphere species that reproduced and had developing offspring during the spring. Southern Hemisphere ecosystems, which were struck during autumn, appear to have recovered up to twice as fast as those in the Northern Hemisphere, the authors note.

Multimedia

Artistic reconstruction
Artistic reconstruction
A paddlefish from Tanis
A paddlefish from Tanis
Cut sections of bone in epoxy resin
Cut sections of bone in epoxy resin
Melanie During excavating a paddlefish in the Tanis deposit.
Melanie During excavating a paddlefish in the Tanis deposit.

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Journal/
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Nature
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, the Netherlands
Funder: Open access funding provided by Uppsala University.
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