Author:
Kennett James P.,Kennett Douglas J.,Culleton Brendan J.,Aura Tortosa J. Emili,Bischoff James L.,Bunch Ted E.,Daniel I. Randolph,Erlandson Jon M.,Ferraro David,Firestone Richard B.,Goodyear Albert C.,Israde-Alcántara Isabel,Johnson John R.,Jordá Pardo Jesús F.,Kimbel David R.,LeCompte Malcolm A.,Lopinot Neal H.,Mahaney William C.,Moore Andrew M. T.,Moore Christopher R.,Ray Jack H.,Stafford Thomas W.,Tankersley Kenneth Barnett,Wittke James H.,Wolbach Wendy S.,West Allen
Abstract
The Younger Dryas impact hypothesis posits that a cosmic impact across much of the Northern Hemisphere deposited the Younger Dryas boundary (YDB) layer, containing peak abundances in a variable assemblage of proxies, including magnetic and glassy impact-related spherules, high-temperature minerals and melt glass, nanodiamonds, carbon spherules, aciniform carbon, platinum, and osmium. Bayesian chronological modeling was applied to 354 dates from 23 stratigraphic sections in 12 countries on four continents to establish a modeled YDB age range for this event of 12,835–12,735 Cal B.P. at 95% probability. This range overlaps that of a peak in extraterrestrial platinum in the Greenland Ice Sheet and of the earliest age of the Younger Dryas climate episode in six proxy records, suggesting a causal connection between the YDB impact event and the Younger Dryas. Two statistical tests indicate that both modeled and unmodeled ages in the 30 records are consistent with synchronous deposition of the YDB layer within the limits of dating uncertainty (∼100 y). The widespread distribution of the YDB layer suggests that it may serve as a datum layer.
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
93 articles.
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