Moon goes by Jupiter on Halloween

On October 30 and 31, 2019, watch for two brilliant luminaries – the crescent moon and the dazzling planet Jupiter – to pop out in close vicinity of one another as dusk deepens into nightfall. Given clear skies, you should have no trouble seeing either world, because the moon and Jupiter rank as the 2nd-brightest and 4th-brightest celestial luminaries, respectively. By early November, a larger crescent moon will leave king planet Jupiter behind to join up with the ringed planet Saturn.

The planet Venus beams as the 3rd-brightest celestial object (after the sun and moon) but you have to catch Venus quite soon after sunset. At northerly latitudes, Venus follows the sun beneath the horizon before nightfall, and at temperate latitudes in the Southern Hemisphere, Venus stays out till after nightfall.

Click here to find an sky almanac providing you with the setting times for the sun, moon and planets in your sky.

Have you been watching the young moon lately? The last few days – on October 28 and 29 – it was quite close to the planets Venus and Mercury on the sky’s dome.

These next few nights, as darkness falls, simply look for the brilliant “star” by the moon and that’ll be Jupiter, the 5th planet from the sun, and the solar system’s largest planet. The gas giant Jupiter has the volume of 1,321 Earth’s!

The moon, planets and stars will all move westward as evening deepens into late night. But all these celestial objects move westward across the sky for the same reason that the sun moves westward during the day. This supposed motion is really a reflection of the Earth spinning on its rotational axis from west-to-east – making it appear as though the sun, stars, moon and planets all travel westward around the Earth each day.

Earth and Jupiter size comaprison

Eleven Earths lined up side by side equal the diameter of the king planet Jupiter. Image via Wikimedia Commons.

All the while, however, the moon is moving eastward relative the stars and planets of the zodiac. The moon travels about 1/2 degree (its own angular diameter) eastward per hour or about 13 degrees eastward per day. Day by day, at the same time, note the moon’s change of position relative to the backdrop stars and planets. This moon’s change of position is due to the moon’s orbital motion.

Starting in late October 2019, watch for the waxing crescent moon to go past Jupiter as it heads toward the planet Saturn, the sixth planet from the sun and the second-largest planet in the solar system.



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On October 30 and 31, 2019, watch for two brilliant luminaries – the crescent moon and the dazzling planet Jupiter – to pop out in close vicinity of one another as dusk deepens into nightfall. Given clear skies, you should have no trouble seeing either world, because the moon and Jupiter rank as the 2nd-brightest and 4th-brightest celestial luminaries, respectively. By early November, a larger crescent moon will leave king planet Jupiter behind to join up with the ringed planet Saturn.

The planet Venus beams as the 3rd-brightest celestial object (after the sun and moon) but you have to catch Venus quite soon after sunset. At northerly latitudes, Venus follows the sun beneath the horizon before nightfall, and at temperate latitudes in the Southern Hemisphere, Venus stays out till after nightfall.

Click here to find an sky almanac providing you with the setting times for the sun, moon and planets in your sky.

Have you been watching the young moon lately? The last few days – on October 28 and 29 – it was quite close to the planets Venus and Mercury on the sky’s dome.

These next few nights, as darkness falls, simply look for the brilliant “star” by the moon and that’ll be Jupiter, the 5th planet from the sun, and the solar system’s largest planet. The gas giant Jupiter has the volume of 1,321 Earth’s!

The moon, planets and stars will all move westward as evening deepens into late night. But all these celestial objects move westward across the sky for the same reason that the sun moves westward during the day. This supposed motion is really a reflection of the Earth spinning on its rotational axis from west-to-east – making it appear as though the sun, stars, moon and planets all travel westward around the Earth each day.

Earth and Jupiter size comaprison

Eleven Earths lined up side by side equal the diameter of the king planet Jupiter. Image via Wikimedia Commons.

All the while, however, the moon is moving eastward relative the stars and planets of the zodiac. The moon travels about 1/2 degree (its own angular diameter) eastward per hour or about 13 degrees eastward per day. Day by day, at the same time, note the moon’s change of position relative to the backdrop stars and planets. This moon’s change of position is due to the moon’s orbital motion.

Starting in late October 2019, watch for the waxing crescent moon to go past Jupiter as it heads toward the planet Saturn, the sixth planet from the sun and the second-largest planet in the solar system.



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Halloween ghost of the summer sun

Every Halloween – and a few days before and after – the brilliant star Arcturus, brightest star in Bootes the Herdsman, sets at the same time and on the same spot on the west-northwest horizon as the summer sun. This star rises at the same time and at the same place on the east-northeast horizon as the summer sun. That’s why – every year at this time – you can consider Arcturus as a ghost of the summer sun.

At mid-northern latitudes, Arcturus now sets about two hours after sunset and rises about two hours before sunrise.

If you live as far north as Barrow, Alaska, the star Arcturus shines all night long now, mimicking the midnight sun of summer.

If you live in the Southern Hemisphere, you can’t see Arcturus right now. South of the equator, Arcturus sets at the same time and on the same place on the horizon as the winter sun. In other words, Arcturus sets before the sun and rises after the sun at southerly latitudes at this time of year.

If you are in the Northern Hemisphere, try watching this star in the October evening chill. You can envision the absent summer sun radiating its extra hours of sunlight. Not till after dark does this star set, an echo of long summer afternoons. Similarly, Arcturus rises in the east before dawn, a phantom reminder of early morning daybreaks.

At northerly latitudes, Arcturus sets in the west after sunset and rises in the east before sunrise. You can verify that you’re looking at Arcturus once the Big Dipper comes out. Its handle always points to Arcturus.

Halloween – also known as All Hallows’ Eve or All Saints’ Eve – is observed in various countries on October 31, especially in the United States. It’s a big deal for America children, who roam from house to house trick or treating, hoping for candy and other treats.

This modern holiday is based on a much older tradition, that of cross-quarter days.

Cover of ‘Star Arcturus, ghost of summer sun’ coloring book

Bottom line: At mid-northern latitudes, Arcturus sets about two hours after sunset around Halloween, at the same point on the horizon as the summer sun. It’s a Halloween ghost of the summer sun and an echo of long summer afternoons.

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Halloween derived from ancient Celtic cross-quarter day

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Every Halloween – and a few days before and after – the brilliant star Arcturus, brightest star in Bootes the Herdsman, sets at the same time and on the same spot on the west-northwest horizon as the summer sun. This star rises at the same time and at the same place on the east-northeast horizon as the summer sun. That’s why – every year at this time – you can consider Arcturus as a ghost of the summer sun.

At mid-northern latitudes, Arcturus now sets about two hours after sunset and rises about two hours before sunrise.

If you live as far north as Barrow, Alaska, the star Arcturus shines all night long now, mimicking the midnight sun of summer.

If you live in the Southern Hemisphere, you can’t see Arcturus right now. South of the equator, Arcturus sets at the same time and on the same place on the horizon as the winter sun. In other words, Arcturus sets before the sun and rises after the sun at southerly latitudes at this time of year.

If you are in the Northern Hemisphere, try watching this star in the October evening chill. You can envision the absent summer sun radiating its extra hours of sunlight. Not till after dark does this star set, an echo of long summer afternoons. Similarly, Arcturus rises in the east before dawn, a phantom reminder of early morning daybreaks.

At northerly latitudes, Arcturus sets in the west after sunset and rises in the east before sunrise. You can verify that you’re looking at Arcturus once the Big Dipper comes out. Its handle always points to Arcturus.

Halloween – also known as All Hallows’ Eve or All Saints’ Eve – is observed in various countries on October 31, especially in the United States. It’s a big deal for America children, who roam from house to house trick or treating, hoping for candy and other treats.

This modern holiday is based on a much older tradition, that of cross-quarter days.

Cover of ‘Star Arcturus, ghost of summer sun’ coloring book

Bottom line: At mid-northern latitudes, Arcturus sets about two hours after sunset around Halloween, at the same point on the horizon as the summer sun. It’s a Halloween ghost of the summer sun and an echo of long summer afternoons.

Donate: Your support means the world to us

Halloween derived from ancient Celtic cross-quarter day

Enjoying EarthSky so far? Sign up for our free daily newsletter today!



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Putting the ‘bang’ in Big Bang

Bright starry explosion beside an expanding cone of stars and galaxies.

According to Big Bang theory, our universe began as a singularity – a point of seemingly infinite density containing all the mass and spacetime of the universe – then inflated over the next 13.8 billion years to the cosmos that we know today. Image via Christine Daniloff/MIT/ESA/Hubble/NASA.

Because light travels at a finite speed, looking out into space lets us look back in time. But – as yet – astronomers have not been able to peer back far enough to witness the birth of the universe. For that reason, what we understand about the universe’s birth comes from theoretical physicists and astrophysicists, who rely on mathematical formulas and computer models. Late last week (October 24, 2019), physicists at MIT announced that they’ve worked with others around the globe to simulate a critical “reheating” period that kickstarted the Big Bang in the universe’s first fractions of a second. This new work helps explain what has been a mystery in cosmology: how cold, uniform matter in the brief period of inflation – a period lasting less than a trillionth of a second in the early universe – transformed to become the ultrahot, complex soup that led to the universe as we know it.

In an fascinating piece for the MIT News Office, Jennifer Chu explained:

As the Big Bang theory goes, somewhere around 13.8 billion years ago the universe exploded into being, as an infinitely small, compact fireball of matter that cooled as it expanded, triggering reactions that cooked up the first stars and galaxies, and all the forms of matter that we see (and are) today.

Just before the Big Bang launched the universe onto its ever-expanding course, physicists believe, there was another, more explosive phase of the early universe at play: cosmic inflation, which lasted less than a trillionth of a second. During this period, matter — a cold, homogeneous goop — inflated exponentially quickly before processes of the Big Bang took over to more slowly expand and diversify the infant universe.

Recent observations have independently supported theories for both the Big Bang and cosmic inflation. But the two processes are so radically different from each other that scientists have struggled to conceive of how one followed the other.

Now physicists at MIT, Kenyon College, and elsewhere have simulated in detail an intermediary phase of the early universe that may have bridged cosmic inflation with the Big Bang. This phase, known as ‘reheating,’ occurred at the end of cosmic inflation and involved processes that wrestled inflation’s cold, uniform matter into the ultrahot, complex soup that was in place at the start of the Big Bang.

Physicist and science historian David Kaiser of MIT is a co-author on the new paper, which was published October 25, 2019, in the peer-reviewed journal Physical Review Letters. He commented in Chu’s article:

The postinflation reheating period sets up the conditions for the Big Bang, and in some sense puts the ‘bang’ in the Big Bang.

It’s this bridge period where all hell breaks loose and matter behaves in anything but a simple way.

EarthSky 2020 lunar calendars are available! They make great gifts. Order now. Going fast!

Three overlapping circles with Earth in the center one and a photon in each of the others.

Alan Guth first proposed and developed cosmic inflation as a theory in 1979. The theory was needed to resolve outstanding mysteries in cosmology. For example, there was the horizon problem. As shown in this image, these photons could not have communicated with each other unless inflation took place in the very early universe. Read more about the inflationary universe and how it solves the horizon problem at the Stephen Hawking Centre for Theoretical Cosmology.

According to Chu, Kaiser and his colleagues used the tools of physics, mathematics and computers to simulate in detail how multiple forms of matter would have interacted at the end of the very brief period of inflation:

Their simulations show that the extreme energy that drove inflation could have been redistributed just as quickly, within an even smaller fraction of a second, and in a way that produced conditions that would have been required for the start of the Big Bang.

The team found this extreme transformation would have been even faster and more efficient if quantum effects modified the way that matter responded to gravity at very high energies. Quantum mechanics is the branch of physics that deals with the very small, that is, with the motion and interaction of subatomic particles, which are the basic consituents of all matter. Einstein’s theory of general relativity, meanwhile, predicts matter and gravity should interact; modern Big Bang Theory is highly dependent on it. It was this blending of Einstein’s theory with quantum mechanics that led to the new work’s conclusion: that a critical “reheating” period at the end of the period of inflation helped transform cold, uniform matter into an ultrahot, complex medium that led to star-filled galaxies, and everything else, we know today.

Kaiser commented:

This enables us to tell an unbroken story, from inflation to the postinflation period, to the Big Bang and beyond. We can trace a continuous set of processes, all with known physics, to say this is one plausible way in which the universe came to look the way we see it today.

So … wow!

Read more about this study from MIT News

Bottom line: Physicists have pondered how the cold, uniform matter of the inflationary early universe became the ultrahot, complex mixture of matter, space and time that led to the universe we know. New work simulates a bridge between cosmic inflation and … everything else.

Source: Nonlinear Dynamics of Preheating after Multifield Inflation with Nonminimal Couplings

Via MIT News



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Bright starry explosion beside an expanding cone of stars and galaxies.

According to Big Bang theory, our universe began as a singularity – a point of seemingly infinite density containing all the mass and spacetime of the universe – then inflated over the next 13.8 billion years to the cosmos that we know today. Image via Christine Daniloff/MIT/ESA/Hubble/NASA.

Because light travels at a finite speed, looking out into space lets us look back in time. But – as yet – astronomers have not been able to peer back far enough to witness the birth of the universe. For that reason, what we understand about the universe’s birth comes from theoretical physicists and astrophysicists, who rely on mathematical formulas and computer models. Late last week (October 24, 2019), physicists at MIT announced that they’ve worked with others around the globe to simulate a critical “reheating” period that kickstarted the Big Bang in the universe’s first fractions of a second. This new work helps explain what has been a mystery in cosmology: how cold, uniform matter in the brief period of inflation – a period lasting less than a trillionth of a second in the early universe – transformed to become the ultrahot, complex soup that led to the universe as we know it.

In an fascinating piece for the MIT News Office, Jennifer Chu explained:

As the Big Bang theory goes, somewhere around 13.8 billion years ago the universe exploded into being, as an infinitely small, compact fireball of matter that cooled as it expanded, triggering reactions that cooked up the first stars and galaxies, and all the forms of matter that we see (and are) today.

Just before the Big Bang launched the universe onto its ever-expanding course, physicists believe, there was another, more explosive phase of the early universe at play: cosmic inflation, which lasted less than a trillionth of a second. During this period, matter — a cold, homogeneous goop — inflated exponentially quickly before processes of the Big Bang took over to more slowly expand and diversify the infant universe.

Recent observations have independently supported theories for both the Big Bang and cosmic inflation. But the two processes are so radically different from each other that scientists have struggled to conceive of how one followed the other.

Now physicists at MIT, Kenyon College, and elsewhere have simulated in detail an intermediary phase of the early universe that may have bridged cosmic inflation with the Big Bang. This phase, known as ‘reheating,’ occurred at the end of cosmic inflation and involved processes that wrestled inflation’s cold, uniform matter into the ultrahot, complex soup that was in place at the start of the Big Bang.

Physicist and science historian David Kaiser of MIT is a co-author on the new paper, which was published October 25, 2019, in the peer-reviewed journal Physical Review Letters. He commented in Chu’s article:

The postinflation reheating period sets up the conditions for the Big Bang, and in some sense puts the ‘bang’ in the Big Bang.

It’s this bridge period where all hell breaks loose and matter behaves in anything but a simple way.

EarthSky 2020 lunar calendars are available! They make great gifts. Order now. Going fast!

Three overlapping circles with Earth in the center one and a photon in each of the others.

Alan Guth first proposed and developed cosmic inflation as a theory in 1979. The theory was needed to resolve outstanding mysteries in cosmology. For example, there was the horizon problem. As shown in this image, these photons could not have communicated with each other unless inflation took place in the very early universe. Read more about the inflationary universe and how it solves the horizon problem at the Stephen Hawking Centre for Theoretical Cosmology.

According to Chu, Kaiser and his colleagues used the tools of physics, mathematics and computers to simulate in detail how multiple forms of matter would have interacted at the end of the very brief period of inflation:

Their simulations show that the extreme energy that drove inflation could have been redistributed just as quickly, within an even smaller fraction of a second, and in a way that produced conditions that would have been required for the start of the Big Bang.

The team found this extreme transformation would have been even faster and more efficient if quantum effects modified the way that matter responded to gravity at very high energies. Quantum mechanics is the branch of physics that deals with the very small, that is, with the motion and interaction of subatomic particles, which are the basic consituents of all matter. Einstein’s theory of general relativity, meanwhile, predicts matter and gravity should interact; modern Big Bang Theory is highly dependent on it. It was this blending of Einstein’s theory with quantum mechanics that led to the new work’s conclusion: that a critical “reheating” period at the end of the period of inflation helped transform cold, uniform matter into an ultrahot, complex medium that led to star-filled galaxies, and everything else, we know today.

Kaiser commented:

This enables us to tell an unbroken story, from inflation to the postinflation period, to the Big Bang and beyond. We can trace a continuous set of processes, all with known physics, to say this is one plausible way in which the universe came to look the way we see it today.

So … wow!

Read more about this study from MIT News

Bottom line: Physicists have pondered how the cold, uniform matter of the inflationary early universe became the ultrahot, complex mixture of matter, space and time that led to the universe we know. New work simulates a bridge between cosmic inflation and … everything else.

Source: Nonlinear Dynamics of Preheating after Multifield Inflation with Nonminimal Couplings

Via MIT News



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Deep-sea nightmares and other ocean spookiness

To get you in the mood for Halloween, the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI) brings you Deep-sea Nightmares

Starring the black sea devil (Melanocetus), a skeleton shrimp (caprellid amphipod), the vampire squid (Vampyroteuthis infernalis), a bat-faced crab (Macroregonia macrochira), the fangtooth (Anoplogaster cornuta), a giant sea spider (as big as your open fist; not an actual spider, but an arthropod called a pycnogonid), bacterial ooze (growing on a hay bale placed at 3,000 m for a carbon experiment), the witch eel (Nettastomidae), a slimy mob of hagfish feeding on a dead fish, and the bloody-belly comb jelly (Lampocteis cruentiventer).

EarthSky 2020 lunar calendars are available! They make great gifts. Order now. Going fast!

Skinny skeletal-looking white shrimp.

Video still via MBARI.

The Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI) is a nonprofit research institution where scientists and engineers work together to explore and study the sea.

Bottom line: Deep-Sea Nightmares video via Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute.



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To get you in the mood for Halloween, the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI) brings you Deep-sea Nightmares

Starring the black sea devil (Melanocetus), a skeleton shrimp (caprellid amphipod), the vampire squid (Vampyroteuthis infernalis), a bat-faced crab (Macroregonia macrochira), the fangtooth (Anoplogaster cornuta), a giant sea spider (as big as your open fist; not an actual spider, but an arthropod called a pycnogonid), bacterial ooze (growing on a hay bale placed at 3,000 m for a carbon experiment), the witch eel (Nettastomidae), a slimy mob of hagfish feeding on a dead fish, and the bloody-belly comb jelly (Lampocteis cruentiventer).

EarthSky 2020 lunar calendars are available! They make great gifts. Order now. Going fast!

Skinny skeletal-looking white shrimp.

Video still via MBARI.

The Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI) is a nonprofit research institution where scientists and engineers work together to explore and study the sea.

Bottom line: Deep-Sea Nightmares video via Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute.



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Did asteroid collision trigger Earth’s abrupt cooling 12,800 years ago?

Sunset over a lake.

The muck that’s been accumulating at the bottom of this lake for 20,000 years is like a climate time capsule. Image via Christopher R. Moore.

By Christopher R. Moore, University of South Carolina

What kicked off the Earth’s rapid cooling 12,800 years ago?

In the space of just a couple of years, average temperatures abruptly dropped, resulting in temperatures as much as 14 degrees Fahrenheit cooler in some regions of the Northern Hemisphere. If a drop like that happened today, it would mean the average temperature of Miami Beach would quickly change to that of current Montreal, Canada. Layers of ice in Greenland show that this cool period in the Northern Hemisphere lasted about 1,400 years.

This climate event, called the Younger Dryas by scientists, marked the beginning of a decline in ice-age megafauna, such as mammoth and mastodon, eventually leading to extinction of more than 35 genera of animals across North America. Although disputed, some research suggests that Younger Dryas environmental changes led to a population decline among the Native Americans known for their distinctive Clovis spear points.

Conventional geologic wisdom blames the Younger Dryas on the failure of glacial ice dams holding back huge lakes in central North America and the sudden, massive blast of freshwater they released into the north Atlantic. This freshwater influx shut down ocean circulation and ended up cooling the climate.

Some geologists, however, subscribe to what is called the impact hypothesis: the idea that a fragmented comet or asteroid collided with the Earth 12,800 years ago and caused this abrupt climate event. Along with disrupting the glacial ice-sheet and shutting down ocean currents, this hypothesis holds that the extraterrestrial impact also triggered an “impact winter” by setting off massive wildfires that blocked sunlight with their smoke.

The evidence is mounting that the cause of the Younger Dryas’ cooling climate came from outer space. My own recent fieldwork at a South Carolina lake that has been around for at least 20,000 years adds to the growing pile of evidence.

Streak of light in a dark sky heading downward toward Earth.

A collision from space would leave its mark on Earth. Image via Vadim Sadovski/Shutterstock.com

What would an Earth impact leave behind?

Around the globe, scientists analyzing ocean, lake, terrestrial and ice core records have identified large peaks in particles associated with burning, such as charcoal and soot, right at the time the Younger Dryas kicked in. These would be natural results of the cataclysmic wildfires you would expect to see in the wake of Earth taking an extraterrestrial hit. As much as 10% of global forests and grasslands may have burned at this time.

Looking for more clues, researchers have pored through the widely distributed Younger Dryas Boundary stratigraphic layer. That’s a distinctive layer of sediments laid down over a given period of time by processes like large floods or movement of sediment by wind or water. If you imagine the surface of the Earth as like a cake, the Younger Dryas Boundary is the layer that was frosted onto its surface 12,800 years ago, subsequently covered by other layers over the millennia.

In the last few years, scientists have found a variety of exotic impact-related materials in the Younger Dryas Boundary layer all over the globe.

These include high-temperature iron and silica-rich tiny magnetic spheres, nanodiamonds, soot, high-temperature melt-glass, and elevated concentrations of nickel, osmium, iridium and platinum.

While many studies have provided evidence supporting the Younger Dryas impact, others have failed to replicate evidence. Some have suggested that materials such as microspherules and nanodiamonds can be formed by other processes and do not require the impact of a comet or asteroid.

Circular blue pond under a cloudless sky.

White Pond has been part of this landscape for 20,000 years or more. Image via Christopher R. Moore.

A view of 12,800 years ago from White Pond

In the southeastern United States, there are no ice cores to turn to in the quest for ancient climate data. Instead, geologists and archaeologists like me can look to natural lakes. They accumulate sediments over time, preserving layer by layer a record of past climate and environmental conditions.

White Pond is one such natural lake, situated in southern Kershaw County, South Carolina. It covers nearly 26 hectares and is generally shallow, less than 2 meters even at its deepest portions. Within the lake itself, peat and organic-rich mud and silt deposits upwards of 6-meters thick have accumulated at least since the peak of the last ice age more than 20,000 years ago.

Men standing on a dock holding a large pole.

Collecting sediment cores from White Pond in 2016. Image via Christopher R. Moore.

So in 2016, my colleagues and I extracted sediment from the bottom of White Pond. Using 4-meter-long tubes, we were able to preserve the order and integrity of the many sediment layers that have accumulated over the eons.

The long sediment cores are cut in half in order to extract samples for analysis. Image via Christopher R. Moore.

Based on preserved seeds and wood charcoal that we radiocarbon dated, my team determined there was about a 10-centimeter thick layer that dated to the Younger Dryas Boundary, from between 12,835 and 12,735 years ago. That is where we concentrated our hunt for evidence of an extraterrestrial impact.

We were particularly looking for platinum. This dense metal is present in the Earth’s crust only at very low concentrations but is common in comets and asteroids. Previous research had identified a large “platinum anomaly” – widespread elevated levels of platinum, consistent with a global extraterrestrial impact source in Younger Dryas layers from Greenland ice cores as well as across North and South America.

Most recently, the Younger Dryas platinum anomaly has been found in South Africa. This discovery significantly extends the geographic range of the anomaly and adds support to the idea that the Younger Dryas impact was indeed a global event.

Volcanic eruptions are another possible source of platinum, but Younger Dryas Boundary sites with elevated platinum do not have other markers of large-scale volcanism.

More evidence of an extraterrestrial impact

In the White Pond samples, we did indeed find high levels of platinum. The sediments also had an unusual ratio of platinum to palladium.

Both of these rare earth elements occur naturally in very small quantities. The fact that there was so much more platinum than palladium suggests that the extra platinum came from an outside source, such as atmospheric fallout in the aftermath of an extraterrestrial impact.

My team also found a large increase in soot, indicative of large-scale regional wildfires. Additionally, the amount of fungal spores that are usually associated with the dung of large herbivores decreased in this layer compared to previous time periods, suggesting a sudden decline in ice-age megafauna in the region at this time.

Scatted red and gold shapes.

Photomicrograph of Sporormiella – fungal spores associated with the dung of megaherbivores – from White Pond. Image via Angelina G. Perrotti.

While my colleagues and I can show that the platinum and soot anomalies and fungal spore decline all happened at the same time, we cannot prove a cause.

The data from White Pond are, however, consistent with the growing body of evidence that a comet or asteroid collision caused continent-scale environmental calamity 12,800 years ago, via vast burning and a brief impact winter. The climate change associated with the Younger Dryas, megafaunal extinctions and temporary declines or shifts in early Clovis hunter-gatherer populations in North America at this time may have their origins in space.

View larger. | A White Pond sediment core is like a timeline of the stratigraphic layers. What researchers found in each layer provides hints of climate and environment at that time. Image via Shutterstock.com/Allen West/NASA/Sedwick C (2008) PLoS Biol 6(4): e99/Martin Pate/Southeast Archaeological Center.

Christopher R. Moore, Archaeologist and Special Projects Director at the Savannah River Archaeological Research Program and South Carolina Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of South Carolina

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Bottom line: New evidence suggests that an extraterrestrial collision 12,800 years ago triggered an abrupt climate change for Earth.

The Conversation



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Sunset over a lake.

The muck that’s been accumulating at the bottom of this lake for 20,000 years is like a climate time capsule. Image via Christopher R. Moore.

By Christopher R. Moore, University of South Carolina

What kicked off the Earth’s rapid cooling 12,800 years ago?

In the space of just a couple of years, average temperatures abruptly dropped, resulting in temperatures as much as 14 degrees Fahrenheit cooler in some regions of the Northern Hemisphere. If a drop like that happened today, it would mean the average temperature of Miami Beach would quickly change to that of current Montreal, Canada. Layers of ice in Greenland show that this cool period in the Northern Hemisphere lasted about 1,400 years.

This climate event, called the Younger Dryas by scientists, marked the beginning of a decline in ice-age megafauna, such as mammoth and mastodon, eventually leading to extinction of more than 35 genera of animals across North America. Although disputed, some research suggests that Younger Dryas environmental changes led to a population decline among the Native Americans known for their distinctive Clovis spear points.

Conventional geologic wisdom blames the Younger Dryas on the failure of glacial ice dams holding back huge lakes in central North America and the sudden, massive blast of freshwater they released into the north Atlantic. This freshwater influx shut down ocean circulation and ended up cooling the climate.

Some geologists, however, subscribe to what is called the impact hypothesis: the idea that a fragmented comet or asteroid collided with the Earth 12,800 years ago and caused this abrupt climate event. Along with disrupting the glacial ice-sheet and shutting down ocean currents, this hypothesis holds that the extraterrestrial impact also triggered an “impact winter” by setting off massive wildfires that blocked sunlight with their smoke.

The evidence is mounting that the cause of the Younger Dryas’ cooling climate came from outer space. My own recent fieldwork at a South Carolina lake that has been around for at least 20,000 years adds to the growing pile of evidence.

Streak of light in a dark sky heading downward toward Earth.

A collision from space would leave its mark on Earth. Image via Vadim Sadovski/Shutterstock.com

What would an Earth impact leave behind?

Around the globe, scientists analyzing ocean, lake, terrestrial and ice core records have identified large peaks in particles associated with burning, such as charcoal and soot, right at the time the Younger Dryas kicked in. These would be natural results of the cataclysmic wildfires you would expect to see in the wake of Earth taking an extraterrestrial hit. As much as 10% of global forests and grasslands may have burned at this time.

Looking for more clues, researchers have pored through the widely distributed Younger Dryas Boundary stratigraphic layer. That’s a distinctive layer of sediments laid down over a given period of time by processes like large floods or movement of sediment by wind or water. If you imagine the surface of the Earth as like a cake, the Younger Dryas Boundary is the layer that was frosted onto its surface 12,800 years ago, subsequently covered by other layers over the millennia.

In the last few years, scientists have found a variety of exotic impact-related materials in the Younger Dryas Boundary layer all over the globe.

These include high-temperature iron and silica-rich tiny magnetic spheres, nanodiamonds, soot, high-temperature melt-glass, and elevated concentrations of nickel, osmium, iridium and platinum.

While many studies have provided evidence supporting the Younger Dryas impact, others have failed to replicate evidence. Some have suggested that materials such as microspherules and nanodiamonds can be formed by other processes and do not require the impact of a comet or asteroid.

Circular blue pond under a cloudless sky.

White Pond has been part of this landscape for 20,000 years or more. Image via Christopher R. Moore.

A view of 12,800 years ago from White Pond

In the southeastern United States, there are no ice cores to turn to in the quest for ancient climate data. Instead, geologists and archaeologists like me can look to natural lakes. They accumulate sediments over time, preserving layer by layer a record of past climate and environmental conditions.

White Pond is one such natural lake, situated in southern Kershaw County, South Carolina. It covers nearly 26 hectares and is generally shallow, less than 2 meters even at its deepest portions. Within the lake itself, peat and organic-rich mud and silt deposits upwards of 6-meters thick have accumulated at least since the peak of the last ice age more than 20,000 years ago.

Men standing on a dock holding a large pole.

Collecting sediment cores from White Pond in 2016. Image via Christopher R. Moore.

So in 2016, my colleagues and I extracted sediment from the bottom of White Pond. Using 4-meter-long tubes, we were able to preserve the order and integrity of the many sediment layers that have accumulated over the eons.

The long sediment cores are cut in half in order to extract samples for analysis. Image via Christopher R. Moore.

Based on preserved seeds and wood charcoal that we radiocarbon dated, my team determined there was about a 10-centimeter thick layer that dated to the Younger Dryas Boundary, from between 12,835 and 12,735 years ago. That is where we concentrated our hunt for evidence of an extraterrestrial impact.

We were particularly looking for platinum. This dense metal is present in the Earth’s crust only at very low concentrations but is common in comets and asteroids. Previous research had identified a large “platinum anomaly” – widespread elevated levels of platinum, consistent with a global extraterrestrial impact source in Younger Dryas layers from Greenland ice cores as well as across North and South America.

Most recently, the Younger Dryas platinum anomaly has been found in South Africa. This discovery significantly extends the geographic range of the anomaly and adds support to the idea that the Younger Dryas impact was indeed a global event.

Volcanic eruptions are another possible source of platinum, but Younger Dryas Boundary sites with elevated platinum do not have other markers of large-scale volcanism.

More evidence of an extraterrestrial impact

In the White Pond samples, we did indeed find high levels of platinum. The sediments also had an unusual ratio of platinum to palladium.

Both of these rare earth elements occur naturally in very small quantities. The fact that there was so much more platinum than palladium suggests that the extra platinum came from an outside source, such as atmospheric fallout in the aftermath of an extraterrestrial impact.

My team also found a large increase in soot, indicative of large-scale regional wildfires. Additionally, the amount of fungal spores that are usually associated with the dung of large herbivores decreased in this layer compared to previous time periods, suggesting a sudden decline in ice-age megafauna in the region at this time.

Scatted red and gold shapes.

Photomicrograph of Sporormiella – fungal spores associated with the dung of megaherbivores – from White Pond. Image via Angelina G. Perrotti.

While my colleagues and I can show that the platinum and soot anomalies and fungal spore decline all happened at the same time, we cannot prove a cause.

The data from White Pond are, however, consistent with the growing body of evidence that a comet or asteroid collision caused continent-scale environmental calamity 12,800 years ago, via vast burning and a brief impact winter. The climate change associated with the Younger Dryas, megafaunal extinctions and temporary declines or shifts in early Clovis hunter-gatherer populations in North America at this time may have their origins in space.

View larger. | A White Pond sediment core is like a timeline of the stratigraphic layers. What researchers found in each layer provides hints of climate and environment at that time. Image via Shutterstock.com/Allen West/NASA/Sedwick C (2008) PLoS Biol 6(4): e99/Martin Pate/Southeast Archaeological Center.

Christopher R. Moore, Archaeologist and Special Projects Director at the Savannah River Archaeological Research Program and South Carolina Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of South Carolina

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Bottom line: New evidence suggests that an extraterrestrial collision 12,800 years ago triggered an abrupt climate change for Earth.

The Conversation



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Go young moon hunting in late October

Watch online as asteroid sweeps between moon and Earth on October 29

Straight white streaks on a gray background with an arrow pointing at a white dot.

The asteroid is marked by an arrow at the center of this image, taken October 27, 2019 via the Virtual Telescope Project.

On October 29, 2019, the near-Earth asteroid 2019 UB8 will have a safe, very close encounter with our planet, coming at about 120,000 miles (190.000 km) from us, half of the average distance of the moon. We at the Virtual Telescope Project in Rome managed to capture it and we will show it live around its fly-by time on October 29, 2019!

The image above comes from the average of three 500-second exposures, remotely taken with “Elena” (PlaneWave 17?+Paramount ME+SBIG STL-6303E) robotic unit available at Virtual Telescope. The telescope tracked the apparent motion of the asteroid. This is why stars show as small trails, while the asteroid looks like a faint, sharp dot of light in the center of the image, marked by an arrow.

The image above is quite exceptional, considering how faint (being small, see below) and fast-moving this rock is.

At the imaging time, asteroid 2019 UB8 was at about 1.3 million km (808,000 mi) from the Earth and it was on its way, approaching us.

This 4.3-9.5 meter (14 to 31 foot) large asteroid will reach its minimum distance (120,000 miles or 190.000 km) from us on October 29, 2019, at 06:30 UTC. Of course, there are no risks at all for our planet.

We are scheduling a live feed on October 29, 2019, starting at 00:30 UTC to track it live: more soon!

Bottom line: A small asteroid – 2019 UB8 – will come very close to Earth on October 29, 2019. It’ll sweep safely past at about half the moon’s distance. Details here.

EarthSky 2020 lunar calendars are available! They make great gifts. Order now. Going fast!



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/2p92RNV
Straight white streaks on a gray background with an arrow pointing at a white dot.

The asteroid is marked by an arrow at the center of this image, taken October 27, 2019 via the Virtual Telescope Project.

On October 29, 2019, the near-Earth asteroid 2019 UB8 will have a safe, very close encounter with our planet, coming at about 120,000 miles (190.000 km) from us, half of the average distance of the moon. We at the Virtual Telescope Project in Rome managed to capture it and we will show it live around its fly-by time on October 29, 2019!

The image above comes from the average of three 500-second exposures, remotely taken with “Elena” (PlaneWave 17?+Paramount ME+SBIG STL-6303E) robotic unit available at Virtual Telescope. The telescope tracked the apparent motion of the asteroid. This is why stars show as small trails, while the asteroid looks like a faint, sharp dot of light in the center of the image, marked by an arrow.

The image above is quite exceptional, considering how faint (being small, see below) and fast-moving this rock is.

At the imaging time, asteroid 2019 UB8 was at about 1.3 million km (808,000 mi) from the Earth and it was on its way, approaching us.

This 4.3-9.5 meter (14 to 31 foot) large asteroid will reach its minimum distance (120,000 miles or 190.000 km) from us on October 29, 2019, at 06:30 UTC. Of course, there are no risks at all for our planet.

We are scheduling a live feed on October 29, 2019, starting at 00:30 UTC to track it live: more soon!

Bottom line: A small asteroid – 2019 UB8 – will come very close to Earth on October 29, 2019. It’ll sweep safely past at about half the moon’s distance. Details here.

EarthSky 2020 lunar calendars are available! They make great gifts. Order now. Going fast!



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/2p92RNV