Updated
Updated · Scientific American · Jun 9
Chicxulub Impact Sustained Hydrothermal Vents for 8 Million Years, Far Beyond 2-Million-Year Estimates
Updated
Updated · Scientific American · Jun 9

Chicxulub Impact Sustained Hydrothermal Vents for 8 Million Years, Far Beyond 2-Million-Year Estimates

3 articles · Updated · Scientific American · Jun 9

Summary

  • Argon isotope tests on Chicxulub crater rocks indicate hydrothermal activity persisted from about 66 million to 58 million years ago after the dinosaur-killing asteroid strike.
  • Four samples came from the crater’s peak ring, drilled in 2016 at depths of 706 to 756 meters below the seafloor off Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula.
  • The finding sharply extends earlier model-based estimates that vents at the impact site lasted only about 2 million years, though researchers say it is unclear how widespread the long-lived activity was.
  • Porous, fractured impact rocks may have created protected microenvironments for microbes, making the result relevant to studies of how life could persist after major impacts.
  • The team said similar crater-driven hydrothermal systems may have existed on Mars, offering clues for future missions seeking past habitable environments.

Insights

Could ancient craters on Mars hold the fossilized remains of similar life-sustaining hot springs?
Did the asteroid that killed the dinosaurs also create an eight-million-year cradle for new life?
Were cosmic collisions, not primordial soups, the true crucibles for life's origin on early Earth?

8 Million Years of Hydrothermal Activity: Chicxulub Crater’s Surprising Role in Life’s Recovery and Astrobiology

Overview

The Chicxulub crater, formed by the asteroid impact that wiped out the dinosaurs 66 million years ago, hosted a vast hydrothermal system that lasted for 8 million years. The immense energy from the impact melted thousands of cubic kilometers of rock, and when this superheated rock met seawater, it created a porous environment filled with hot water. This led to the formation of an extensive hydrothermal system beneath the crater, which provided a unique and long-lasting habitat for microbial life, showing how catastrophic events can create new opportunities for life to thrive.

...