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Studi meragukan dari dampak kosmik yang
pembunuh mammoth
tetesan batu tanah yang dibentuk oleh pemanasan yang kemungkinan berasal dari house fire zaman batu dan bukan dari petaka kosmik 12.900 tahun
yang lalu, menurut penelitian baru. Studi
tanah dari Suriah
, terbaru untuk mendiskreditkan teori kontroversial bahwa dampak kosmis yang dipicu the younger dryas diperiode dingin bumi .....read
more
Study casts
doubt on mammoth-killing cosmic impact
Date:
January 6, 2015
Source:
University of
California - Davis
Summary:
Rock soil droplets
formed by heating most likely came from Stone Age house fires and not from a
disastrous cosmic impact 12,900 years ago, according to new research. The
study, of soil from Syria, is the latest to discredit the controversial theory
that a cosmic impact triggered the Younger Dryas cold period.
.....................
rock soil droplets
formed by heating most likely came from Stone Age house fires and not from a
disastrous cosmic impact 12,900 years ago, according to new research from the
University of California, Davis. The study, of soil from Syria, is the latest
to discredit the controversial theory that a cosmic impact triggered the
Younger Dryas cold period.
The Younger Dryas lasted a thousand years and coincided with the extinction
of mammoths and other great beasts and the disappearance of the Paleo-Indian
Clovis people. In the 1980s, some researchers put forward the idea that the
cool period, which fell between two major glaciations, began when a comet or
meteorite struck North America.
In the new study, published online in the Journal of Archaeological
Science, scientists analyzed siliceous scoria droplets -- porous granules
associated with melting -- from four sites in northern Syria dating back 10,000
to 13,000 years ago. They compared them to similar scoria droplets previously
suggested to be the result of a cosmic impact at the onset of the Younger
Dryas.
"For the Syria side, the impact theory is out," said lead author
Peter Thy, a project scientist in the UC Davis Department of Earth and
Planetary Sciences. "There's no way that can be done."
The findings supporting that conclusion include:
·
The composition of the scoria droplets was related to the local soil, not
to soil from other continents, as one would expect from an intercontinental
impact.
·
The texture of the droplets, thermodynamic modeling and other analyses showed
the droplets were formed by short-lived heating events of modest temperatures,
and not by the intense, high temperatures expected from a large impact event.
·
And in a key finding, the samples collected from archaeological sites
spanned 3,000 years. "If there was one cosmic impact," Thy said,
"they should be connected by one date and not a period of 3,000
years."
So if not resulting from a cosmic impact, where did the scoria droplets
come from? House fires. The study area of Syria was associated with early
agricultural settlements along the Euphrates River. Most of the locations
include mud-brick structures, some of which show signs of intense fire and
melting. The study concludes that the scoria formed when fires ripped through
buildings made of a mix of local soil and straw.
Story Source:
The above story is based on materials provided by University of
California - Davis.Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
Journal Reference:
1. P. Thy, G. Willcox, G.H. Barfod, D.Q.
Fuller. Anthropogenic origin of siliceous scoria droplets from
Pleistocene and Holocene archaeological sites in northern Syria. Journal
of Archaeological Science, 2015; 54: 193 DOI:10.1016/j.jas.2014.11.027