Rebutting a speculative hypothesis that comet explosions changed Earth's
climate sufficiently to end the Clovis culture in North America about
13,000 years ago, Sandia lead author Mark Boslough and researchers from
14 academic institutions assert that other explanations must be found
for the apparent disappearance.
"There's no plausible mechanism to get airbursts over an entire
continent," said Boslough, a physicist. "For this and other reasons, we
conclude that the impact hypothesis is, unfortunately, bogus."
In a December 2012 American Geophysical Union monograph, first
available in January, the researchers point out that no appropriately
sized impact craters from that time period have been discovered, nor
have any unambiguously "shocked" materials been found.
In addition, proposed fragmentation and explosion mechanisms "do not
conserve energy or momentum," a basic law of physics that must be
satisfied for impact-caused climate change to have validity, the authors
write.
Also absent are physics-based models that support the impact
hypothesis. Models that do exist, write the authors, contradict the
asteroid-impact hypothesizers.
The authors also charge that "several independent researchers have
been unable to reproduce reported results" and that samples presented in
support of the asteroid impact hypothesis were later discovered by
carbon dating to be contaminated with modern material.
The Boslough trail
Boslough has a decades-long history of successfully interpreting the effects of comet and asteroid collisions.
His credibility was on the line on in July 1994 when Eos, the widely
read newsletter of the American Geophysical Union, ran a front-page
prediction by a Sandia National Laboratories team, led by Boslough, that
under certain conditions plumes from the collision of comet
Shoemaker-Levy 9 with the planet Jupiter would be visible from Earth.
The Sandia team -- Boslough, Dave Crawford, Allen Robinson and Tim
Trucano -- were alone among the world's scientists in offering that
possibility.
"It was a gamble and could have been embarrassing if we were wrong,"
said Boslough. "But I had been watching while Shoemaker-Levy 9 made its
way across the heavens and realized it would be close enough to the
horizon of Jupiter that the plumes would show." His reasoning was backed
by simulations from the world's first massively parallel processing
supercomputer, Sandia's Intel Paragon.
On the one hand, it was a chance to check the new Paragon's logic
against real events, a shakedown run for the defense-oriented machine.
On the other, it was a hold-your-breath prediction, a kind of Babe Ruth
moment when the Babe is reputed to have pointed to the spot in the
center field bleachers he intended to hit the next ball. No other
scientists were willing to point the same way, partly due to previous
failures in predicting the behavior of comets Kohoutek and Halley, and
partly because most astronomers believed the plumes would be hidden
behind Jupiter's bulk.
That the plumes indeed proved visible started Boslough on his own
trajectory as a media touchstone for things asteroidal and meteoritic.
It didn't hurt that, when he stands before television cameras to
discuss celestial impacts, his earnest manner, expressive gestures and
extraterrestrial subject matter make him seem a combination of Carl
Sagan and Luke Skywalker, or perhaps Tom Sawyer and Indiana Jones.
Standing in jeans, work shirt and hiking boots for the Discovery
Channel at the site in Siberia where a mysterious explosion occurred 105
years ago, or discussing it at Sandia with his supercomputer
simulations in bold colors on a big screen behind him, the rangy,
6-foot-3 Sandia researcher vividly and accurately explained why the
mysterious explosion at Tunguska that decimated hundreds of square miles
of trees and whose ejected debris was seen as far away as London most
probably was caused neither by flying saucers drunkenly ramming a
hillside (a proposed hypothesis) nor by an asteroid striking the Earth's
surface, but rather by the fireball of an asteroid airburst -- an
asteroid exploding high above ground, like a nuclear bomb, compressed to
implosion as it plunged deeper into Earth's thickening, increasingly
resistive atmosphere. The governing physics, he said, was precisely the
same as for the airburst on Jupiter.
Among later triumphs, Boslough was the Sandia component of a National
Geographic team flown to the Libyan Desert to make sense of strange
yellow-green glass worn as jewelry by pharaohs in days past. Boslough's
take: It was the result of heat on desert sands from a hypervelocity
impact caused by an even bigger asteroid burst.
In the present case
In the Clovis case, Boslough felt that his ideas were taken further
than he could accept when other researchers claimed that the purported
demise of Clovis civilization in North America was the result of climate
change produced by a cluster of comet fragments striking Earth.
In a widely reported press conference announcing the Clovis comet
hypothesis in 2007, proponents showed a National Geographic animation
based on one of Boslough's simulations as inspiration for their idea.
Indiana Jones-style, Boslough responded. Confronted by apparently
hard asteroid evidence, as well as a Nova documentary and an article in
the journal Science, all purportedly showing his error in rebutting the
comet hypothesis, Boslough ordered carbon dating of the major evidence
provided by the opposition: nanodiamond-bearing carbon spherules
associated with the shock of an asteroid's impact. The tests found the
alleged 13,000-year-old carbon to be of very recent formation.
While this raised red flags to those already critical of the impact
hypothesis, "I never said the samples were salted," Boslough said
carefully. "I said they were contaminated."
That find, along with irregularities reported in the background of
one member of the opposing team, was enough for Nova to remove the
entire episode from its list of science shows available for streaming,
Boslough said.
"Just because a culture changed from Clovis to Folsom spear points
didn't mean their civilization collapsed," he said. "They probably just
used another technology. It's like saying the phonograph culture
collapsed and was replaced by the iPod culture."

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