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By News Staff | October 30th 2007 02:07 PM | 2 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments
A series of monumental volcanic eruptions in India may have killed the dinosaurs 65 million years ago, not a meteor impact in the Gulf of Mexico. The eruptions, which created the gigantic Deccan Traps lava beds of India, are now the prime suspect in the most famous and persistent paleontological murder mystery, say scientists who have conducted a slew of new investigations honing down eruption timing.

"It's the first time we can directly link the main phase of the Deccan Traps to the mass extinction," said Princeton University paleontologist Gerta Keller. The main phase of the Deccan eruptions spewed 80 percent of the lava which spread out for hundreds of miles. It is calculated to have released ten times more climate altering gases into the atmosphere than the nearly concurrent Chicxulub meteor impact, according to volcanologist Vincent Courtillot from the Physique du Globe de Paris.



Keller's crucial link between the eruption and the mass extinction comes in the form of microscopic marine fossils that are known to have evolved immediately after the mysterious mass extinction event. The same telltale fossilized planktonic foraminifera were found at Rajahmundry near the Bay of Bengal, about 1000 kilometers from the center of the Deccan Traps near Mumbai. At Rajahmundry there are two lava "traps" containing four layers of lava each. Between the traps are about nine meters of marine sediments. Those sediments just above the lower trap, which was the mammoth main phase, contain the incriminating microfossils.

Keller and her collaborator Thierry Adatte from the University of Neuchatel, Switzerland, are scheduled to present the new findings on Tuesday, 30 October, at the annual meeting of the Geological Society of America in Denver. They will also display a poster on the matter at the meeting on Wednesday, 31 October.

Previous work had first narrowed the Deccan eruption timing to within 800,000 years of the extinction event using paleomagnetic signatures of Earth's changing magnetic field frozen in minerals that crystallized from the cooling lava. Then radiometric dating of argon and potassium isotopes in minerals narrowed the age to within 300,000 years of the 65-million-year-old Cretaceous-Tertiary (a.k.a. Cretaceous-Paleogene) boundary, sometimes called the K-T boundary.

The microfossils are far more specific, however, because they demonstrate directly that the biggest phase of the eruption ended right when the aftermath of the mass extinction event began. That sort of clear-cut timing has been a lot tougher to pin down with Chicxulub-related sediments, which predate the mass extinction.

"Our results are consistent and mutually supportive with a number of new studies, including Chenet, Courtillot and others (in press) and Jay and Widdowson (in press), that reveal a very short time for the main Deccan eruptions at or near the K-T boundary and the massive carbon dioxide and sulfur dioxide output of each major eruption that dwarfs the output of Chicxulub," explained Keller. "Our K-T age control combined with these results strongly points to Deccan volcanism as the likely leading contender in the K-T mass extinction." Keller's study was funded by the National Science Foundation.

The Deccan Traps also provide an answer to a question on which Chicxulub was silent: Why did it take about 300,000 years for marine species to recover from the extinction event" The solution is in the upper, later Deccan Traps eruptions.

"It's been an enigma," Keller said. "The very last one was Early Danian, 280,000 years after the mass extinction, which coincides with the delayed recovery."

Keller and her colleagues are planning to explore the onset of the main phase of Deccan volcanism, that is, the rocks directly beneath the main phase lavas at Rajahmundry. That will require drilling into the Rajahmundry Traps, a project now slated for December-January 2007/2008.

**WHEN & WHERE**

Main Deccan Volcanism Phase Ends at K-T Mass Extinction: Evidence from the Krishna-Godavari Basin, SE India
Colorado Convention Center Room 506
Tuesday, October 30, 11:00 a.m. – 11:15 a.m.
View abstract: http://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2007AM/finalprogram/abstract_128505.htm

Paleoenvironment After Main Deccan Volcanism Ended at K-T Mass Extinction: Evidence From The Krishna-Godavari Basin, SE India.
Colorado Convention Center Room 407
Tuesday, October 30, 11:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
View abstract: http://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2007AM/finalprogram/abstract_130024.htm

Age and Paleoenvironment of Deccan Volcanism and the K-T Mass Extinction
Colorado Convention Center Exhibit Hall E/F
Wednesday, October 31, 8:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.
View abstract: http://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2007AM/finalprogram/abstract_130054.htm

Comments

I'm not a scientist just a curious old timer. If the Chicxulub impact occurred 65 million years ago and the Continental Drift Theory is correct, then the area that the impact would have hit would not have been where Mexico is today. If the impact was indeed on the land mass and the drift carried the crater along with the separation of the continents then could not the proximity to the Deccan fields 65 millions years ago indicate that perhaps the impact triggered the volcanic activity. If so, then the combined atmospheric disturbance could certainly have been responsible for the dinosaur demise.

I too am not an expert in either or these fields. I am just a guy with a globe. When I look at that globe I notice that if you mark the place where the KT collision is supposed to have occured, and then mark where the India volcanic eruptions took place, you will notice they are almost exactly on opposite sides of the earth. Could it have been that the KT collision caused the India eruptions?

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