Did a comet hit the Great Lakes region and fragment human populations 12,900 years ago? Two University of Oregon researchers are on a multi-institutional 26-member team proposing a startling new theory: that an extraterrestrial impact, possibly a comet, set off a 1,000-year-long cold spell and wiped out or fragmented the prehistoric Clovis culture and a variety of animal genera across North America almost 13,000 years ago. Driving the theory is a carbon-rich layer of soil that has been found, but not definitively explained, at some 50 Clovis-age sites in North America that date to the onset of a cooling period known as the Younger Dryas Event. The sites include several on the Channel Island off California where UO archaeologists Douglas J. Kennett and Jon M. Erlandson have conducted research. The theory is being discussed publicly, for the first time, Monday in a news conference at the 2007 Joint Assembly of the American Geophysical Union being held this week in Acapulco, Mexico. Kennett is among the attendees who will be available to discuss the theory with their peers. The British journal Nature addressed the theory in a news-section story in its May 18 issue. Before today, members […]
Thursday, May 24th, 2007
Oregon Researchers Involved in New Clovis-age Impact Theory
Author:
Source: University of Oregon
Publication Date: 21-May-07
Link: Oregon Researchers Involved in New Clovis-age Impact Theory
Source: University of Oregon
Publication Date: 21-May-07
Link: Oregon Researchers Involved in New Clovis-age Impact Theory
Stephan: Thanks to Jim Baraff.