http://uanews.opi.arizona.edu/cgi-bin/WebObjects/UANews.woa/wa/MainStoryDetails?ArticleID5072

UA Researcher Says Cataclysm That Resurfaced the Earth and The Inner 
Solar System 3.9 Billion Years Ago Was Caused By Asteroids, Not Comets

Julieta Gonzalez
University of Arizona Press Release
February 27, 2002

The bombardment that resurfaced the Earth 3.9 billion years ago was 
produced by asteroids, not comets, according to David Kring of the 
University of Arizona Lunar & Planetary Laboratory and Barbara Cohen, 
formerly at the UA and now with the University of Hawaii.

Their findings will appear in the Thursday, Feb. 28 edition of the 
Journal of Geophysical Research published by the American Geophysical 
Union.

The significance of this conclusion is that the bombardment was so 
severe that it destroyed older rocks on Earth. Which, Kring says, is the 
reason why the oldest rocks found are less than 3.9 billion years old.

Additionally, they argue, impact-generated hydrothermal systems would 
have been excellent incubators for pre-biotic chemistry and the early 
evolution of life, consistent with previous work that shows life 
originated in hot water systems around or slightly before 3.85 billion 
years ago.

This same bombardment according to Kring and Cohen, affected the entire 
inner solar system, producing thousands of impact craters on Mercury, 
Venus, the Moon and Mars. Most of the craters in the southern hemisphere 
of Mars were produced during this event.

On Earth, at least 22,000 impact craters with diameters greater than 20 
kilometers were produced, including about 40 impact basins with 
diameters of about 1,000 kilometers in diameter. Several impact craters 
of about 5,000 kilometers were created as well-each one exceeding the 
dimensions of Australia, Europe, Antarctica or South America. The 
thousands of impacts occurred in a very short period of time, 
potentially producing a globally-significant environmental change at an 
average rate of once per 100 years.

Also, the event is recorded in the asteroid belt, as witnessed by the 
meteoritic fragments which have survived to fall to Earth today.

Kring, has been involved in the research and measurements of the 
Chicxulub impact crater located near Merida, Yucatan, Mexico. He has 
collaborated on and led various international research teams which have 
drilled to unearth evidence of the Cretaceous-Tertiary (K/T) impact 
which is thought to have led to mass extinctions on Earth, including 
dinosaur extinction. Earlier this month, Kring returned from a drilling 
operation at the impact site where crews worked around the clock to 
recover core samples to determine what the impactor was and details of 
the catastrophic event that wiped out more than 75 percent of all plant 
and animal species on Earth.

Journalists only may obtain a pdf copy of the paper by writing to Emily 
Crum providing your name, name of publication, phone number and e-mail 
address.

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      Contact Information
      David Kring, Associate Professor of Planetary Sciences and
      Director, NASA/UA Space Imagery Center at the University of Arizona
      520-621-2024
      [EMAIL PROTECTED]

      Barbara Cohen, Hawaii Institute of Geophysics & Planetology,
      University of Hawaii at Manoa
      808-956-3901
      [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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