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End-Permian catastrophe by a bolide impact: evidence of a gigantic release of sulfur from the mantle

journal contribution
posted on 2001-09-01, 00:00 authored by K Kaiho, Y Kajiwara, T Nakano, Y Miura, H Kawahata, K Tazaki, M Ueshima, Z Chen, Guang ShiGuang Shi
Our studies in southern China have revealed a remarkable sulfur and strontium isotope excursion at the end of the Permian, along with a coincident concentration of impact- metamorphosed grains and kaolinite and a significant decrease in manganese, phosphorous, calcium, and microfossils (foraminifera). These data suggest that an asteroid or a comet hit the ocean at the end of Permian time and caused a rapid and massive release of sulfur from the mantle to the ocean-atmosphere system, leading to significant oxygen consumption, acid rain, and the most severe biotic crisis in the history of life on Earth.

History

Journal

Geology

Volume

29

Issue

9

Pagination

815 - 818

Publisher

Geological Society of America

Location

Boulder, Colo.

ISSN

0091-7613

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal; C Journal article

Copyright notice

2001, Geological Society of America