Chemical profiles in K/T boundary section of Meghalaya, India: cometary, asteroidal or volcanic

The Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary (KTB) exposed as a 1.5-cm-thick limonitic layer in the Um Sohryngkew River basin in Meghalaya is marked by enhanced concentrations of Ir, Co, Ni, Os, Fe, Zn, Sb (by factors of 4 to ~1200) and REE (by factors of 1.7 to ~5) compared to the Cretaceous shales. Ir concent...

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Main Authors: Bhandari, N., Gupta, M., Pandey, J., Shukla, P. N.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Elsevier Science 1994
Subjects:
Online Access:http://repository.ias.ac.in/18502/
http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/0009254194900043
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spelling ftindianacasci:oai:repository.ias.ac.in:18502 2023-05-15T18:00:59+02:00 Chemical profiles in K/T boundary section of Meghalaya, India: cometary, asteroidal or volcanic Bhandari, N. Gupta, M. Pandey, J. Shukla, P. N. 1994-03-01 http://repository.ias.ac.in/18502/ http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/0009254194900043 unknown Elsevier Science Bhandari, N. Gupta, M. Pandey, J. Shukla, P. N. (1994) Chemical profiles in K/T boundary section of Meghalaya, India: cometary, asteroidal or volcanic Chemical Geology, 113 (1-2). pp. 45-60. ISSN 0009-2541 QB Astronomy Article PeerReviewed 1994 ftindianacasci 2013-01-20T10:16:20Z The Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary (KTB) exposed as a 1.5-cm-thick limonitic layer in the Um Sohryngkew River basin in Meghalaya is marked by enhanced concentrations of Ir, Co, Ni, Os, Fe, Zn, Sb (by factors of 4 to ~1200) and REE (by factors of 1.7 to ~5) compared to the Cretaceous shales. Ir concentration is generally <0.01 ng g -1 in shales away from the boundary but gradually increases by a factor of >10 in ~2-m-thick "broad band" around the KTB, abruptly reaching a peak concentration of 12.1 ng g -1 within the limonitic layer. The Os/Ir ratio at the KTB is ~0.37 but in the adjacent shales it is ~1.8, suggesting that the sources of these elements in the peak and the broad band may be different. Cretaceous planktonic foraminifera and dynocysts start disappearing before the Ir-rich limonitic layer was deposited but several diminutive Cretaceous foraminifera survive after this layer. The observations indicate that the extinctions are confined to a short span of time but are probably not as abrupt as anticipated by the asteroidal impact hypothesis. The chemical data are discussed in terms of cometary, asteroidal and volcanic hypotheses. The profiles of Ir and Os/Ir can be understood in the frame work of a model of cometary impact in which cometary debris falls onto the Earth preceding and succeeding the fall of the cometary nucleus. Article in Journal/Newspaper Planktonic foraminifera Indian Academy of Sciences: Publication of Fellows
institution Open Polar
collection Indian Academy of Sciences: Publication of Fellows
op_collection_id ftindianacasci
language unknown
topic QB Astronomy
spellingShingle QB Astronomy
Bhandari, N.
Gupta, M.
Pandey, J.
Shukla, P. N.
Chemical profiles in K/T boundary section of Meghalaya, India: cometary, asteroidal or volcanic
topic_facet QB Astronomy
description The Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary (KTB) exposed as a 1.5-cm-thick limonitic layer in the Um Sohryngkew River basin in Meghalaya is marked by enhanced concentrations of Ir, Co, Ni, Os, Fe, Zn, Sb (by factors of 4 to ~1200) and REE (by factors of 1.7 to ~5) compared to the Cretaceous shales. Ir concentration is generally <0.01 ng g -1 in shales away from the boundary but gradually increases by a factor of >10 in ~2-m-thick "broad band" around the KTB, abruptly reaching a peak concentration of 12.1 ng g -1 within the limonitic layer. The Os/Ir ratio at the KTB is ~0.37 but in the adjacent shales it is ~1.8, suggesting that the sources of these elements in the peak and the broad band may be different. Cretaceous planktonic foraminifera and dynocysts start disappearing before the Ir-rich limonitic layer was deposited but several diminutive Cretaceous foraminifera survive after this layer. The observations indicate that the extinctions are confined to a short span of time but are probably not as abrupt as anticipated by the asteroidal impact hypothesis. The chemical data are discussed in terms of cometary, asteroidal and volcanic hypotheses. The profiles of Ir and Os/Ir can be understood in the frame work of a model of cometary impact in which cometary debris falls onto the Earth preceding and succeeding the fall of the cometary nucleus.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Bhandari, N.
Gupta, M.
Pandey, J.
Shukla, P. N.
author_facet Bhandari, N.
Gupta, M.
Pandey, J.
Shukla, P. N.
author_sort Bhandari, N.
title Chemical profiles in K/T boundary section of Meghalaya, India: cometary, asteroidal or volcanic
title_short Chemical profiles in K/T boundary section of Meghalaya, India: cometary, asteroidal or volcanic
title_full Chemical profiles in K/T boundary section of Meghalaya, India: cometary, asteroidal or volcanic
title_fullStr Chemical profiles in K/T boundary section of Meghalaya, India: cometary, asteroidal or volcanic
title_full_unstemmed Chemical profiles in K/T boundary section of Meghalaya, India: cometary, asteroidal or volcanic
title_sort chemical profiles in k/t boundary section of meghalaya, india: cometary, asteroidal or volcanic
publisher Elsevier Science
publishDate 1994
url http://repository.ias.ac.in/18502/
http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/0009254194900043
genre Planktonic foraminifera
genre_facet Planktonic foraminifera
op_relation Bhandari, N.
Gupta, M.
Pandey, J.
Shukla, P. N. (1994) Chemical profiles in K/T boundary section of Meghalaya, India: cometary, asteroidal or volcanic Chemical Geology, 113 (1-2). pp. 45-60. ISSN 0009-2541
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