Calibrated ages of the YDB layer at the three sites. Each figure shows the mean calibrated age as a white dot with thin black bars indicating the mean uncertainties. Dark gray bars represent a 68.3% Confidence Interval (CI), and the lighter gray bars represent a 95.4% CI. The vertical red-bordered yellow bands indicate the revised YDB age range of 12,875−12,775 cal BP. All dates for the three sites overlap the predicted age range, supporting a synchronous YDB age within radiocarbon uncertainties of 68.3% and 95.4% Confidence Interval (CI).(A) Arlington Canyon, California: the upper date (range: 12,965−12,715 cal BP) at 482.5 cm matches the upper abundance peaks in reworked microspherules and carbon spherules. The lower date (range: 13,070−12,840 cal BP) at ~500.5 cm corresponds to the most prominent YDB proxy peaks. (B) Blackwater Draw, New Mexico: Three dates (ranges: 12,970−12,725 cal BP; 13,055−12,490 cal BP; and 12,895−12,485 cal BP) are for a unit interpreted as a black mat by Haynes [2] (age of 13,060−12,735 cal BP [64,79]. This unit contains YDB proxies, Clovis projectile points, and extinct megafaunal remains [1]. (C) Murray Springs, Arizona: The black mat layer, dating to 12,895−12,735 cal BP, calculated from eight radiocarbon dates by Haynes [2], contains YDB proxies co-occurring with Clovis projectile points and megafaunal remains [1]. All radiocarbon dates were calibrated using OxCal v4.4.4 [80] with IntCal20. — PLOS One
Shocked quartz grains are an accepted indicator of crater-forming cosmic impact events, which also typically produce amorphous silica along the fractures. Furthermore, previous research has shown that shocked quartz can form when nuclear detonations, asteroids, and comets produce near-surface or “touch-down” airbursts.
When cosmic airbursts detonate with enough energy and at sufficiently low altitude, the resultant relatively small, high-velocity fragments may strike Earth’s surface with high enough pressures to generate thermal and mechanical shock that can fracture quartz grains and introduce molten silica into the fractures. Here, we report the discovery of shocked quartz grains in a layer dating to the Younger Dryas (YD) onset (12.8 ka) in three classic archaeological sequences in the Southwestern United States: Murray Springs, Arizona; Blackwater Draw, New Mexico; and Arlington Canyon, California.
These sites were foundational in demonstrating that the extinction or observed population bottlenecks of many megafaunal species and the coeval collapse/reorganization of the Clovis technocomplex in North America co-occurred at or near the YD onset. Using a comprehensive suite of 10 analytical techniques, including electron microscopy (TEM, SEM, CL, and EBSD), we have identified grains with glass-filled fractures similar to shocked grains associated with nuclear explosions and 27 accepted impact craters of different ages (e.g., Meteor Crater, 50 ka; Chesapeake Bay, 35 Ma; Chicxulub, 66 Ma; Manicouagan, 214 Ma) and produced in 11 laboratory shock experiments.
In addition, we used hydrocode modeling to explore the temperatures, pressures, and shockwave velocities associated with the airburst of a 100-m fragment of a comet and conclude that they are sufficient to produce shocked quartz. These shocked grains co-occur with previously reported peak concentrations in platinum, meltglass, soot, and nanodiamonds, along with microspherules, similar to those found in ~28 microspherule layers that are accepted as evidence for cosmic impact events, even in the absence of a known crater.
The discovery of apparently thermally-altered shocked quartz grains at these three key archaeological sites supports a cosmic impact as a major contributing factor in the megafaunal extinctions and the collapse of the Clovis technocomplex at the YD onset.
Shocked quartz at the Younger Dryas onset (12.8 ka) supports cosmic airbursts/impacts contributing to North American megafaunal extinctions and collapse of the Clovis technocomplex, PLOS One (open access)
Astrobiology,