The most devastating asteroid to hit Earth - Sean P. S. Gulick

228,650 views ・ 2023-11-14

TED-Ed


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66 million years ago, near what’s now the Yucatán Peninsula,
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a juvenile sauropod feasted on horsetail plants on a riverbank.
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Earth was a tropical planet.
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Behemoth and tiny dinosaurs alike roamed its lands,
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while reptiles and tentacled ammonites swept its seas.
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But, in an instant, everything would change.
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A roughly 12-kilometer-wide asteroid was careening toward Earth
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at around 20 kilometers per second.
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From where the sauropod stood,
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there would have been no early warning signs.
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The asteroid barreled through Earth's atmosphere in a matter of seconds
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and struck the Yucatán’s submerged continental shelf.
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It exploded upon impact,
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instantaneously creating a 100-kilometer-wide hole
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and ejecting sedimentary and crystalline rocks.
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Within minutes, the impact crater, known today as Chicxulub,
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began collapsing inwards.
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Meanwhile, the base rebounded some 20 kilometers above the Earth’s surface,
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then fell back down and moved outwards, creating a ring of mountains.
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The energy released from the asteroid’s impact is estimated to have been
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several billion times that of a nuclear bomb.
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The force sent seismic energy across the planet
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at a much greater magnitude than any earthquake
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a tectonic fault could ever produce.
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Massive landslides ensued.
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And a tsunami sped from the newly formed crater,
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potentially reaching 1,500 meters high.
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Countless lives were extinguished.
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Some instantly: all life within 1,500 kilometers of the impact site
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was incinerated;
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others right after: by colossal waves, landslides, and hurricane force winds.
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But many organisms across the planet survived.
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It was what came next that would bring about the end for many species,
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including almost all dinosaurs.
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This was just the beginning of one of the most devastating periods
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in the history of life on Earth.
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When the asteroid struck, it sent hundreds of gigatons
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of carbon-dioxide-rich limestone and sulfur-saturated-sediments
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into the atmosphere.
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The sulfur combined with water vapor to create sulfate aerosols.
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This plume of limestone dust, soot, and sulfate aerosols
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spread from the impact site at several kilometers per second,
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blanketing the globe in a matter of hours.
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It’s thought to have blocked the Sun,
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plunging Earth into an extended period of darkness
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and dropping the temperature in many places by at least 25°C.
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The asteroid’s immediate impact was devastating,
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but it seems to have been the rapid climate change it triggered
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that ended the roughly 165-million-year reign of the dinosaurs.
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Plants and plankton rapidly died,
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causing the collapse of food webs worldwide.
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An estimated 75% of life on Earth went extinct,
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including almost all dinosaurs.
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Small birds were the only kinds that remained,
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perhaps because they relied on hardy seeds that weathered the catastrophe.
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It's unclear why exactly the lifeforms that survived the extinction did.
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Many smaller organisms, like insects, persisted.
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So did early mammals— perhaps because of their ability to burrow and hibernate.
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And photosynthetic lifeforms like algae,
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that had ways of withstanding low-light conditions,
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also survived.
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Traces of the asteroid scattered worldwide and the scar of the Chicxulub crater
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attest to this period of monumental destruction.
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So, what are the chances of another Chicxulub happening?
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Space programs are continuously identifying and tracking
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near-Earth asteroids.
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Fortunately, the likelihood of one as large and cataclysmic
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striking in the next thousand or so years seems to be small—
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something like a 7 in a million chance.
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However, we are facing the consequences of another kind of rapid climate change,
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this time because of humanity's own emissions.
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Animals are going extinct faster than ever in our history,
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and people are being displaced from their homes.
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But, unlike the dinosaurs,
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we have the opportunity to avoid the large-scale devastation that will come
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if governments continue with the status quo.
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