A Double Disaster: New Evidence Confirms a Second Asteroid Impact at the End of the Cretaceous
Sixty-six million years ago, the reign of the dinosaurs abruptly ended. The prevailing scientific consensus attributes this catastrophic event to the impact of a massive asteroid in what is now the Yucatán Peninsula, creating the Chicxulub crater. However, recent groundbreaking research suggests that the dinosaurs faced a double whammy: a second, smaller but still devastating, asteroid impact in the Atlantic Ocean, at approximately the same time. This discovery significantly alters our understanding of the Cretaceous-Paleogene (K-Pg) extinction event, painting a picture far more complex and destructive than previously imagined.
The Nadir Crater: A Newly Confirmed Impact Site
The compelling evidence for this second impact comes from the Nadir Crater, a 5.28-mile-wide (8.5-kilometer-wide) depression located beneath approximately 1,300 feet (400 meters) of sediment on the Guinea Plateau off the coast of West Africa. Initially identified in 2022, the crater’s nature remained somewhat ambiguous until recently. High-resolution three-dimensional seismic data, painstakingly acquired and analyzed by a team of researchers led by Uisdean Nicholson of Heriot-Watt University in Scotland, has now definitively confirmed its origin as an asteroid impact structure. The detailed images revealed the characteristic bowl-shaped morphology and other geological features consistent with a high-velocity impact event. Crucially, the team’s research, published in Communications Earth & Environment, confirms the crater’s age – 66 million years old, precisely coinciding with the Chicxulub impact and the K-Pg extinction.
The Power of the Impact: A Colossal Underwater Event
The Nadir asteroid, while significantly smaller than the Chicxulub impactor, still packed a formidable punch. Estimates suggest that it struck the Earth at an astonishing speed of approximately 12.43 miles per second (20 kilometers per second), or nearly 45,000 miles per hour (72,000 km/hr). This high-velocity impact generated a catastrophic chain of events. The team’s seismic data reveals that the impact "liquified the sediments below the seabed across the entire plateau," triggering massive underwater landslides. Furthermore, they project that the impact generated a colossal tsunami wave, potentially reaching heights of half a mile (800 meters) or more. This immense wave would have devastated coastal regions across the Atlantic, adding another layer of devastation to the already catastrophic consequences of the Chicxulub impact.
Chicxulub’s devastating effect: While the Nadir impact was undoubtedly significant, it pales in comparison to the sheer magnitude of the Chicxulub event. "The asteroid responsible for Chicxulub is far bigger than that which we propose for Nadir," explained Nicholson in a 2022 interview. "We would expect around 10,000 times more energy to be released from Chicxulub. So the Nadir impact would have been dwarfed by Chicxulub." The Chicxulub impact released an estimated 100 million megatons of force, triggering immediate and widespread destruction, including mile-high tsunami waves and the ejection of massive amounts of dust, soot, and sulfur into the atmosphere, triggering a global "impact winter." This dramatically altered Earth’s climate, leading to widespread ecosystem collapse and the extinction of roughly 75% of all plant and animal species, including the non-avian dinosaurs.
Unraveling the Timing and Origin: Multiple Hypotheses
The near-simultaneous nature of the two impacts raises intriguing questions about their potential connection. The research team has proposed several hypotheses:
Fragmentation of a Larger Asteroid: One possibility is that the Nadir and Chicxulub impactors were fragments of a larger parent body that broke apart during its approach to Earth. This hypothesis gained further support from research published in Science last month, which suggests that the parent body originated from the outer regions of the solar system, beyond Jupiter. This implies that the parent body broke apart during a gravitational interaction with Jupiter, sending multiple fragments on a collision course with Earth.
Asteroid Belt Collision: Another possibility is a catastrophic collision within the asteroid belt, resulting in a shower of asteroids being flung towards Earth around the same timeframe. This scenario is likely, although not directly provable.
- Pure Coincidence: Finally, it’s important to acknowledge that the coincidence of two significant asteroid impacts within a relatively short geological timeframe could simply be due to chance. While less likely given the data, this possibility cannot be completely dismissed.
The Significance of the Discovery: Implications for the K-Pg Extinction
The confirmation of the Nadir Crater significantly impacts our understanding of the K-Pg extinction event. While the Chicxulub impact remains the primary driver of the extinction, the additional impact of the Nadir asteroid, though smaller, likely acted as a powerful secondary event, exacerbating the environmental devastation and potentially contributing to the extinction of vulnerable species. The combined effects of both impacts, coupled with other environmental factors at play during this period, would have created an exceptionally challenging environment for life on Earth.
Future Research: Drilling into the Past
To further investigate the Nadir impact and its consequences, the research team has applied for permission to drill into the seabed and recover sediment cores from the crater. This ambitious undertaking will provide invaluable data to refine estimates of the impact’s energy, determine the composition of the impacting asteroid, and reconstruct the unfolding of the immediate aftermath. Analyzing the recovered material, such as shocked minerals and tektites (small glassy objects formed by the melting of rock during impact) will provide crucial information on the magnitude of the event. This information will not only strengthen the scientific consensus behind the Nadir impact but also offer a more comprehensive understanding of the environmental devastation caused by the dual asteroid impacts that marked the end of the Cretaceous period. The discovery of the Nadir Crater serves as a potent reminder of the significant influence that extraterrestrial events can have on Earth’s history and the vulnerability of life to catastrophic impacts. This discovery emphasizes how much we still have to learn about our planet’s past and the importance of continued research into the K-Pg extinction event and similar cosmic threats.