From the June 2006 issue

Causes of Earth’s mass extinctions

The Meteor Crater impact event killed off most plant and animal life in the near vicinity, but it was nothing compared to our planet's mass extinctions.
By | Published: June 26, 2006 | Last updated on May 18, 2023

Extinct
Astronomy: Roen Kelly
In Earth’s modern history (meaning the time since complex life evolved on Earth), there have been five mass extinctions. These “big five” are the End Ordovician (roughly 440 million years ago), the Late Devonian (roughly 365 million years ago), the End Permian, or Permian-Triassic, (250 million years ago), the End Triassic (210 million years ago), and the Cretaceous-Tertiary (65 million years ago). Scientists say they know roughly when each occurred, but figuring out what caused each one is another story.
The Cretaceous-Tertiary (K-T) extinction is the most studied of the big five. Scientists are all but certain the K-T extinction was associated with an impact event. While the impact itself didn’t cause a mass dying, the effects that followed led to roughly 50 percent of genera dying. (Genera is the rank above species and below family, and is the rank paleontologists typically use when discussing extinctions.) The impact likely caused severe climate change: dust clouds shrouded the planet, blocking out sunlight. Therefore, green plant life couldn’t produce chlorophyll and died off. So, any animals in a plant food chain died, which included, of course, the dinosaurs.

In the 1980s, a group of scientists, led by Nobel-prize-winning physicist Luis Alvarez, and his son, geologist Walter Alvarez, discovered fossilized traces of iridium, hundreds of times greater than normal. This iridium is spread throughout the world, and dates back to roughly 65 million years ago. Iridium is rare at Earth’s surface but is commonly found within asteroids and comets. The Alvarez hypothesis stated that an impact was the likely cause of the K-T extinction.

In 1990, Alan Hildebrand and colleagues studied a large crater just off the Yucatan peninsula in Mexico. Name Chicxulub Crater, it dates back to roughly 65 million years ago — corresponding to the K-T extinction event. Scientists now mostly believe a space rock impacted Earth roughly 65 million years ago, killing dinosaurs, and giving mammals a chance to thrive.

Asteroid impact
This is an artist’s conception of an asteroid slamming into Earth.
Astronomy: Elizabeth Rowan
The Permian-Triassic (P-T) extinction was the most devastating in the history of complex life, which has existed for the last 600 million years or so on Earth. Roughly 83 percent of genera, including 95 percent of marine species were killed. The causes of this extinction are poorly understood.

When a meteor impact carved out Meteor Crater in Arizona, it exposed a sequence of rocks that spans the P-T boundary. Sediments deposited precisely at the time of the P-T mass extinction, however, weren’t preserved in this part of the world. So the rocks exposed by the Meteor Crater impact event cannot be used to determine the cause of the P-T mass extinction. Scientists know the sea level rose, oxygen levels in oceans were low, and carbon dioxide levels were high — but what could have caused these effects?

All five mass extinctions likely resulted from a combination of environmental and biological reasons (a slow decrease in life over millions of years, global warming or cooling, sea levels rising), with one major event — environmental or extraterrestrial — tipping the balance. With the K-T extinction, an impact was the likely cause; with the late Ordovician, a group led by Adrian Melott of the University of Kansas, think a nearby gamma-ray burst could have send Earth into a nuclear winter (see “Do we live in a cosmic shooting gallery,” Astronomy November 2005); with the Permian, scientists think volcanism may have been the cause.

Was either of the other two — or both — from an impact event? Scientists have considered that the late Devonian may have been related to an impact event, global cooling, or volcanism. And the end-Triassic mass extinction? This extinction is the least understood of the big five. Scientists speculate maybe volcanism, an impact, or severely low levels of oxygen in the oceans led to roughly 50 percent of genera dying.

For any of these mass extinctions, all time measurements have an uncertainty of anywhere from a few hundred thousand years to a few million years. And unfortunately, direct evidence is difficult to come by.