Nanodiamonds and wildfire evidence in the Usselo horizon postdate the Alleroed-Younger Dryas boundary

The controversial Younger Dryas impact hypothesis suggests that at the onset of the Younger Dryas an extraterrestrial impact over North America caused a global catastrophe. The main evidence for this impact-after the other markers proved to be neither reproducible nor consistent with an impact-is th...

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Published inProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS Vol. 109; no. 20; pp. 7648 - 7653
Main Authors van Hoesel, Annelies, Hoek, Wim Z, Braadbaart, Freek, van der Plicht, Johannes, Pennock, Gillian M, Drury, Martyn R
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 15.05.2012
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Summary:The controversial Younger Dryas impact hypothesis suggests that at the onset of the Younger Dryas an extraterrestrial impact over North America caused a global catastrophe. The main evidence for this impact-after the other markers proved to be neither reproducible nor consistent with an impact-is the alleged occurrence of several nanodiamond polymorphs, including the proposed presence of lonsdaleite, a shock polymorph of diamond. We examined the Usselo soil horizon at Geldrop-Aalsterhut (The Netherlands), which formed during the Alleroed/Early Younger Dryas and would have captured such impact material. Our accelerator mass spectrometry radiocarbon dates of 14 individual charcoal particles are internally consistent and show that wildfires occurred well after the proposed impact. In addition we present evidence for the occurrence of cubic diamond in glass-like carbon. No lonsdaleite was found. The relation of the cubic nanodiamonds to glass-like carbon, which is produced during wildfires, suggests that these nanodiamonds might have formed after, rather than at the onset of, the Younger Dryas. Our analysis thus provides no support for the Younger Dryas impact hypothesis.
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ISSN:0027-8424