Environmental Hazards

BRING:

Video: Asteroids, Deadly Impact

“Rock” samples – paper with parent and daughter percents

Graph paper

U238 parent daughter graph

2cmX8cm strips of paper

DISCLAIMER: These notes do NOT cover everything you need to know. You may need to look up some item or concept online or in a text. Test questions are not exact copies of the OBJECTIVES but if you know the OBJECTIVES thoroughly, you should do well on the exams.

Part 1 - Global Warming- rough notes

Part 2 – What killed the dinosaurs? – rough notes

Part 1 - Global Warming Rough Notes

Covered in class and notes on “Comparative Environments”

I will not ask you about this on Test 2.

BUT be sure to do the assignment GLOBAL WARMING

Points from this assignment COUNT TOWARD TEST 2.

Part 2 – What killed the dinosaurs? – rough notes

OBJECTIVES:

Define and differentiate between the following: atom, element, molecule, ion, isotope. (Look up these on line or in your text.)

What is meant by radioactivity? For what do astronomers use radioactivity? What is meant by parent and daughter in this context?

Define half-life. If you start with 100 grams of radioactive material, how much is left after one half-life? After two half-lives? After three half-lives?

Given a graph of a parent-daughter decay, and given a “sample” with a known parent percent, find the age of the “sample”

What evidence suggests that a meteor strike killed the dinosaurs? When?

CLASS:

Death of dinosaurs ~65 million years ago

Eras and mass extinctions from fossil records

Permian (~251 million years ago) - ~ 90% of species on Earth wiped out

Late Cretaceous (65 million years ago) – 70 % of species wiped out

Others

We will focus on the Late Cretaceous era.

Some terminology regarding eras:

Older sources define the era after the Cretaceous (symbol K) as the Tertiary (symbol T) era.

Newer sources define the era after the Cretaceous as the Paleocene era.

These notes use the older terminology.

Something happened to wipe out the dinosaurs and 70% of the species on Earth

Fossil record (Dinosaurs, ammonites)

How do we know the ages?

One way: Radioactive dating, half-life

See http://www.agiweb.org/news/evolution/datingfossilrecord.html for example.

Or http://www.astronomynotes.com/solfluf/s4.htm

Or http://phet.colorado.edu/en/simulation/radioactive-dating-game

Done in class - Exercise on half-life and reading parent-daughter decay graphs to find the age of a sample.

Sample parent-daughter graph

(Currently unable to find the source for this graph.)

Could volcanoes have wiped out the dinosaurs?

Examples – Pinatubo, St Helens, Deccan Traps

More likely a meteorite impact (Alvarez and company)

Or a combination of the two

Original Alvarez paper: http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1980Sci...208.1095A

Nice summary at: http://science.jrank.org/pages/2643/Extinction-asteroid-impact-theory.html

Evidence for meteor impact

1. K-T layer or boundary

Thin, dark layer, world-wide, 65 million years ago

Dino fossils below, none above

70% of species on Earth died out

2. K-T layer is dark

3. Iridium in K-T layer

4. Shocked quartz in and near K-T boundary

5. Chixulub crater in Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico

http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/earth/features/chicxulub.cfm

Has Earth been whacked before?

Other craters http://liftoff.msfc.nasa.gov/academy/space/solarsystem/meteors/Craters.html

Other impacts – Example Chelyabinsk Feb 2013

Other collisions in solar system:

Jupiter impact (Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 in 1993)

Chelyabinsk Feb 2013

Potential for future collisions

http://liftoff.msfc.nasa.gov/academy/space/solarsystem/meteors/ImpactHazard.html

See also video: “Asteroids: Deadly Impact” from National Geographic especially the part starting with Gene Shoemaker through Tunguska.

Updates on what killed the dinosaurs

2012 Stronger argument for volcanoes as primary source

http://www.livescience.com/25324-volcanoes-killed-dinosaurs.html

2015 Impact in Yucatan doubled volcanic activity in Deccan Traps

https://www.theguardian.com/science/2015/oct/01/asteroid-that-killed-dinosaurs-also-intensified-volcanic-eruptions-study

Revised 21 March 2016