1 / 35

Natural Disasters Unit 2

Natural Disasters Unit 2. Extraterrestrial Threats Impacts and Extinctions Chapter 13. Learning Objectives. Know the difference between asteroids, meteoroids, and comets Understand the physical processes associated with airbursts and impact craters

monita
Download Presentation

Natural Disasters Unit 2

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Natural Disasters Unit 2 Extraterrestrial Threats Impacts and Extinctions Chapter 13

  2. Learning Objectives • Know the difference between asteroids, meteoroids, and comets • Understand the physical processes associated with airbursts and impact craters • Understand the possible causes of mass extinction • Know the evidence for the impact hypothesis that produced the mass extinction at the end of the Cretaceous period

  3. Learning Objectives, cont. • Know the likely physical, chemical, and biological consequences of impact from a large asteroid or comet • Understand the risk of impact or airburst of extraterrestrial objects and how that risk might be minimized

  4. Earth’s Place in Space • Origins of universe begin with “Big Bang” 14 billion years ago. • Explosion producing atomic particles • First stars probably formed 13 billion years ago. • Lifetime of stars depends on mass • Large stars burn up more quickly ~100,000 years • Smaller stars, like our sun ~10 billion years • Supernovas signal death of star • Releases energy and shock waves • Click to see movie at right:

  5. Earth’s Place in Space, cont. • 5 billion years ago, supernova explosion triggered the formation of our sun. • Sun grew by buildup of matter from solar nebula • Pancake of rotating hydrogen and helium dust • After formation of sun, other particles were trapped in rings. • Particles in rings attracted other particles and collapsed into planets • Earth was hit by objects, adding to its formation • Bombardment continues today

  6. Figure 13.2

  7. Asteroids, Meteoroids, and Comets • Particles in solar system are arranged by diameter and composition. • Asteroids 10m (30ft)–1000 km(620 mi). • Found in asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter • Composed of rock, metallic, or combinations • Meteoroids are broken up asteroids. • Meteors are meteoroids that enter Earth’s atmosphere. • We landed a probe on this asteroid: Eros

  8. Comets • have glowing tails • composed of frozen water or carbon dioxide • Originated in Oort cloud

  9. Figure 13.3

  10. Airbursts and Impacts • Objects enter Earth’s atmosphere at 12–72 km/s (27,000–161,000 mph) • Metallic or stoney • Heat up due to friction as they fall through atmosphere, produce bright light • Meteorites • If the object strikes Earth • Concentrated in Antarctica • Airbursts • Object explodes in atmosphere 12–5o km (7 –31 mi) • Ex: Tunguska

  11. Figure 13.5

  12. Impact Crater • Provide evidence of meteor impacts. • Bowl-shaped depressions with upraised rim • Rim is overlain by ejecta blanket • Broken rocks cemented together into breccia • Features of impact craters are unique from other craters. • Impacts involve high velocity, energy, pressure, and temperature. • Kinetic energy of impact produces shock wave into earth. • Compresses, heats, melts, and excavates materials • Rocks become metamorphosed or melt with other materials.

  13. Figure 13.6

  14. Simple Impact Craters • Typically small < 6 km (4 mi) • Ex. Barringer Crater Figure 13.7

  15. Complex Impact Craters • Larger in diameter > 6 km (4 mi) • Rim collapses more completely • Center uplifts following impact Figure 13.9

  16. Impact Crater, cont. • Craters are much more common on Moon. • Most impacts are in ocean, buried, or destroyed. • Impacts on land have been eroded or buried by debris. • Smaller objects burn up in Earth’s atmosphere before impact.

  17. Mass Extinctions • Sudden loss of large numbers of plants and animals relative to number of new species being added • Defines the boundaries of geologic periods or epochs • Usually involve rapid climate change, triggered by • Plate tectonics • Moves habitats to different locations • Volcanic activity • Large eruptions release CO2, warming Earth • Volcanic ash reflects radiation, Cooling Earth • Extraterrestrial impact

  18. Six Major Mass Extinctions • Ordovician, 446 mya, continental glaciation in Southern Hemisphere • Permian, 250 mya, volcanoes causing global warming and cooling • Triassic–Jurassic boundary, 202 mya, volcanic activity associated with breakup of Pangaea • Cretaceous–Tertiary boundary (K-T boundary), 65 mya, asteroid impact • Eocene period, 34 mya, plate tectonics • Pleistocene epoch, initiated by airburst, continues today, caused by human activity

  19. K-T Boundary Mass Extinction • Dinosaurs disappeared with many plants and animals. • 70% of all genera died • Set the stage for evolution of mammals • First question: What does geologic history tell us about K-T Boundary? • Walter and Luis Alvarez decided to measure concentration of Iridium in clay layer at K-T boundary in Italy. • Fossils found below layer were not found above. • How long did it take to form the clay layer? • Iridium deposits say that layer formed quickly. • Probably extinction caused by single asteroid impact.

  20. K-T Boundary Mass Extinction, cont. • Alvarez did not have a crater to prove the theory. • Crater was identified in 1991 in Yucatan Peninsula. • Diameter approx. 180 km (112 mi) • Nearly circular • Semi-circular pattern of sinkholes, cenotes, on land defining edge • Possibly as deep as 30–40 km (18–25 mi) • Slumps and slides filled crater • Drilling finds breccia under the surface • Glassy indicating intense heat

  21. Figure 13.12

  22. Sequence of Events • Asteroid moving at 30 km (19 mi) per second • Asteroid impacts Earth, produces crater 200 km (125 mi) diameter, 40 km (25 mi) deep • Shock waves crush, melt rocks, vaporized rocks on outer fringe Figure 13.13a Figure 13.13b

  23. Sequence of Events, cont. • Seconds after impact: • Ejecta blanket forms • Mushroom cloud of dust and debris • Fireball sets off wildfires around the globe • Sulfuric acid enters atmosphere • Dust blocks sunlight • Tsunamis from impact reach over 300 m (1000 ft) Figure 13.13c

  24. Sequence of Events, cont. • Month later • No sunlight, no photosynthesis • Continued acid rain • Food chain stopped • Several months later • Sunlight returns • Acid rain stops • Ferns restored on burned landscape Figure 13.13d Figure 13.13e

  25. K-T Extinction, Final • Impact caused massive extinction, but allowed for evolution of mammals. • Another impact of this size would mean another mass extinction probably for humans and other large mammals. • However, impacts of this size are very rare. • Occur once ever 40–100 my • Smaller impacts are more probable and have their own dangers.

  26. Linkages with Other Natural Hazards • Tsunamis • Wildfires • Earthquakes • Mass wasting • Climate change • Volcanic eruptions

  27. Risk Related to Impacts • Risk related to probability and consequences • Large events have consequences, will be catastrophic • Worldwide effects • Potential for mass extinction • Return period of 10’s–100’s millions of years • Smaller events have regional catastrophe • Effects depends on site of event • Return period of 1000 years • Likelihood of an urban area hit every few 10,000 years

  28. Risk Related to Impacts, cont. • Risk from impacts is relatively high. • Probability that you will be killed by • Impact: 0.01%-0.1% • Car accident: 0.008% • Drowning: 0.001% • However, that is AVERAGE probability over thousands of years. • Events and deaths are very rare!

  29. The Torino Impact Scale

  30. What is it for? • A "Richter Scale" for newly discovered asteroids and comets. • A communication tool for astronomers and the public. • Why is it needed? • Predictions for newly discovered NEOs are naturally uncertain. • For most objects, even the initial calculations are sufficient to show that they will not make any close passes by the Earth within the next century. • However, for some objects, 21st century close approaches and possible collisions with the Earth cannot be completely ruled out.

  31. Minimizing the Impact Hazard • Identify nearby threatening objects. • Spacewatch • Inventory of objects with diameter > 100 m in Earth crossing orbits • 85,000 objects to date • Near-Earth Asteroid Tracking (NEAT) project • Identify objects diameter of 1 km • Use telescopes and digital imaging devices • Most objects threatening Earth will not collide for several 1000’s of years from discovery.

  32. Minimizing the Impact Hazard, cont. • Options once a hazard is detected • Blowing it up in space • Small pieces could become radioactive and rain down on earth • Nudging it out of Earth’s orbit • Much more likely since we will have time to study object • Technology can change orbit of asteroid • Costly and need coordination of world military and space agencies • Evacuation • Possible if we can predict impact point • Could be impossible depending on how large an area would need to be evacuated

  33. EndNatural Disasters Unit 2 Extraterrestrial Threats Impacts and Extinctions Chapter 13

More Related