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Sudden death at the end of the Mesozoic
Authors:Cesare Emiliani  Eric B. Kraus  Eugene M. Shoemaker
Affiliation:Department of Geology, University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL 33133, U.S.A.;Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Science, University of Colorado, Boulder CO 80309, U.S.A.;United States Geological Survey, Flagstaff, AZ 86001, U.S.A.
Abstract:A paleoecological analysis of the fossil record before and after the Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary indicates that the widespread extinctions and biological stresses around the boundary are best explained in terms of a sudden, significant, but short temperature rise. L. Alvarez and co-authors, having found an enrichment in iridium at the same boundary, postulated that it was associated with the impact of an extraterrestrial body. If this body struck the ocean, the water injected into the atmosphere may have led to a transient increase in the global surface temperature. This temperature pulse may have been primarily responsible for the effects observed in the biosphere. The pattern of extinction of higher plant species suggests that splash down occurred in the northern Pacific-Bering Sea area.
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