News on Earth-subjects
- History of asteroid impacts on Earth hidden in rocks
- Evidence of nearby supernovae affecting life on Earth
- Molten rock signal period of intense asteroid impacts and raise questions about the source of impactors
- "State of Flux" image gallery of our changing Earth
- The hottest place on Earth
- Earth usually has 2 Moons!
- Modelling a Solar storm hittiing Earth
- Watching the Earth breathe
- Asteroid impact may have caused the last ice-age
- Flying through a 30km crack in the ice
- Undersea vulcanoe in the Canary Islands
- Earth from Sahara crosses Atlantic
- Most downloadet image on the internet in 2012
- Fresh water build-up in the Arctic
- Cold plasma abundant far above Earth
- Earths temperatures in 2011
- New research casts doubt on Late Heavy Bombardment
- New way to measure Earths magnetosphere
- 100years at the South-pole
- Lightening sprites caught on video
- Magnetic pole reversals are common
- Lightning-made Waves in Earth's Atmosphere Leak Into Space
- Centuryries old moss growing in Antarctica
- UK university launches interactive sea-level map
- Earth's storms differ from Jupiters
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Comet cause for climate change theory dealt blow by fungus
Saturday, 19 June 2010 12:51
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| Solar system - Earth |
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Theories of impacts and their influence on animal extinctions and climate change are receiving increasing attention both in the scientific and popular literature. Despite increasing evidence to dispute the theory, the idea that onset of the Younger Dryas (‘Big Freeze’) climate interval, mega-faunal extinctions, including mammoths, the demise of the North American Clovis culture, and a range of other effects, is due to a comet airburst and/or impact event has remained alive both through written and television media despite growing negative scientific evidence. |




A team of scientists – led by Professor Andrew C Scott of the Department of Earth Sciences at Royal Holloway, University of London – have revealed that neither comet nor catastrophe were the cause for abrupt climate change some 12.900 years ago.