Asteroid behind extinction of dinosaurs also responsible for cooling Earth

An asteroid impact that eliminated all the dinosaurs from the planet 66 million-years-ago, is also responsible for cooling down the Earth to a certain extent, a study revealed.

The Chicxulub asteroid impact, the research revealed, most likely released climate-altering sulphur and cooled the Earth far more than originally thought.

Immediately after the Chicxulub event, some amount of sulphur and carbon were ejected into the Earth's atmosphere from vaporized rocks. This research makes a more refined estimate of the exact amount, suggesting that more than three times as much sulfur may have entered the air compared to what previous models assumed, implying the ensuing period of cool weather may have been colder than previously thought.

The study lends support to the hypothesis that the impact played a significant role in the Cretaceous-Paleogene extinction event that eradicated nearly three-quarters of Earths plant and animal species, according to Joanna Morgan, from the Imperial College London in the UK.

"Many climate models cant currently capture all of the consequences of the Chicxulub impact due to uncertainty in how much gas was initially released," Morgan said.

"We wanted to revisit this significant event and refine our collision model to better capture its immediate effects on the atmosphere," she said.

66 million years ago, an asteroid approximately 12 kilometers wide slammed into Earth. The collision took place near what is now the Yucatán peninsula in the Gulf of Mexico.

The asteroid is often cited as a potential cause of the Cretaceous-Paleogene extinction event, a mass extinction that erased up to 75 percent of all plant and animal species, including the dinosaurs.

The asteroid collision had global consequences because of the massive amounts of dust, sulfur and carbon dioxide that was thrown into the atmosphere, that formed a cloud that reflected sunlight and dramatically reduced Earths temperature.

The study, published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters, showed that the Earths average surface air temperature may have dropped by as much as 26 degrees Celsius and that sub-freezing temperatures persisted for at least three years after the impact.

Scientists simulated the pressure of the shock waves created by the impact to estimate the amounts of gases released in different impact scenarios.

They changed variables such as the angle of the impact and the composition of the vaporized rocks to reduce the uncertainty of their calculations.

The results show the impact likely released about 325 gigatonnes of sulphur and 425 gigatonnes of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, more than 10 times global human emissions of carbon dioxide in 2014.

A previous study that modeled Earths climate after the collision had assumed 100 gigatonnes of sulphur and 1,400 gigatonnes of carbon dioxide were ejected as a result of the impact.

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