Chicxulub impact site stayed hot for 8 million years

The Chicxulub asteroid impact that ended the dinosaur era left the site in what is now Mexico hot enough to sustain underground microbial life for at least 8 million years. New analysis of rock cores shows the hydrothermal system lasted far longer than earlier estimates suggested.

The 15-kilometre-wide asteroid struck 66 million years ago and melted about 10,000 cubic kilometres of rock. Seawater combined with the molten material to form a porous hydrothermal system that extended several kilometres underground. Researchers led by Annemarie Pickersgill at the University of Glasgow drilled one kilometre into the crater and dated minerals using argon isotopes. The ages ranged from the time of impact to about 58 million years ago, indicating hydrothermal activity continued for 8 million years. Sulphur isotopes in the cores also point to microbial life that recovered quickly within the system. Chris Kirkland of Curtin University said the findings show large impacts can create long-lived underground habitats rather than simply destroying environments. The results suggest early Earth impact craters may have offered extended refuges for life, and similar systems could have existed on other planets.

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Scientists suggest that asteroid impacts created hot, chemical-rich environments that could have kick-started life on Earth. A new review led by recent Rutgers graduate Shea Cinquemani highlights impact-generated hydrothermal systems as potential cradles for life's building blocks. These systems may have persisted for thousands of years, providing ideal conditions for early biology.

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Researchers in South Korea have found stromatolites inside the Hapcheon impact crater, suggesting asteroid strikes created conditions that supported early oxygen-producing life.

Researchers have found that the magma reservoir beneath Japan's Kikai caldera, site of the Holocene's largest eruption 7,300 years ago, is refilling with newly injected magma. Using underwater seismic imaging, a team led by Kobe University's Nobukazu Seama mapped the reservoir and linked it to the ancient event. The discovery offers insights into how such systems rebuild after massive eruptions.

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Researchers at ETH Zurich have discovered that Earth formed with just the right amount of oxygen during its core development, keeping essential phosphorus and nitrogen accessible for life. Too much or too little oxygen would have trapped or lost these elements. The finding highlights a chemical 'Goldilocks zone' critical for habitability.

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