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Isotopic-geochemical study of nitrogen and carbon in peat from the Tunguska Cosmic Body explosion site
Authors:Evgeniy M Kolesnikov  Giuseppe Longo  Tatjana Boettger  Paola Gioacchini  Roberto Giampieri
Institution:a Faculty of Geology, Moscow State University, 119992 Moscow, Russia
b Dipartimento di Fisica dell’Università di Bologna, Via Irnerio 46, I-40126 Bologna, Italy
c INFN, Sezione di Bologna, Via Irnerio 46, I-40126 Bologna, Italy
d UFZ Centre for Environmental Research Leipzig-Halle, Theodor-Lieser-Strasse 4, D-06120 Halle, Germany
e Dipartimento di Scienze e Tecnologie Agroambientali dell’Università di Bologna, Via San Giacomo 7, I-40126 Bologna, Italy
f Dipartimento di Biologia Evoluzionistica Sperimentale dell’Università di Bologna, Via Irnerio 44, I-40126 Bologna, Italy
g ENEA, Centro Ricerche Ezio Clementel, Via don Fiammelli 2, I-40128 Bologna, Italy
Abstract:Isotopic-geochemical investigations were carried out on peat samples from the 1908 Tunguska Cosmic Body (TCB) explosion area. We analyzed two peat columns from the Northern peat bog, sampled in 1998, and from the Raketka peat bog, sampled during the 1999 Italian expedition, both located near the epicenter of the TCB explosion area. At the depth of the “catastrophic” layer, formed in 1908, and deeper, one can observe shifts in the isotopic composition of nitrogen (up to Δ15N = +7.2‰) and carbon (up to Δ13C = +2‰) and also an increase in the nitrogen concentration compared to those in the normal, upper layers, unaffected by the Tunguska event. One possible explanation for these effects could be the presence of nitrogen and carbon from TCB material and from acid rains, following the TCB explosion, in the “catastrophic” and “precatastrophic” layers of peat. We found that the highest quantity of isotopically heavy nitrogen fell near the explosion epicenter and along the TCB trajectory. It is calculated that 200,000 tons of nitrogen fell over the area of devastated forest, i.e., only about 30% of the value calculated by Rasmussen et al. (1984). This discrepancy is probably caused by part of the nitrogen having dispersed in the Earth’s atmosphere. The isotopic effects observed in the peat agree with the results of previous investigations Kolesnikov et al 1998a], Kolesnikov et al 1998b], Kolesnikov et al 1999] and Rasmussen et al 1999] and also with the increased content of iridium and other platinoids found in the corresponding peat layers of other columns Hou et al 1998] and Hou et al 2000]. These data favor the hypothesis of a cosmochemical origin of the isotopic effects.
Keywords:Tunguska  Cosmochemistry  Meteorites  Asteroids  Comets
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