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Science

Extra-terrestrial impact did in mammoths: scientists

A thin layer of carbon and debris laid down 12,900 years ago supports the theory that the extinction of mammoths and other ice-age mammals was caused by an 'extra-terrestial' event.

A thin layer of carbon and debris laid down 12,900 yearsago supports the theory that the extinction of mammoths and other large mammals was caused by an "extra-terrestrial" event, researchers reported Tuesday.

The cause of the suddendisappearanceof 35 kinds of mammal including mastodons, ground sloths, horses andcamels from North America is a matter of continuing controversy, withhuman overhuntingbeing the main alternative theory to sudden cooling.

The 26 authors ofTuesday's paper, published in theProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, come down on the side of sudden cooling, based on studies of10 North American sites from the Clovis Period, an erawhen humans hunted mastodons. Itended suddenly about the same time the carbon appeared.

They suggest that "multiple ET airbursts along with surface impacts" possibly by an asteroid, comet or meteorite and the massive wildfires that followed laid down a three-centimetre carbon-rich "black layer" with elements of soot, charcoal and glass-like carbon over the Clovis sites.

The base of the layer coincides with the beginning of theYounger Dryas cooling period,a 1,000-year ice age that began about the same time that Clovis culture ended.

The researchers said there were Clovis tools and"megafauna" bones under the layer, but none in or on top of it.

"We don't have a smoking gun for our theory, but we sure have a lot of shell casings," Brown University planetary geologist Peter Schultz said in a statement. "Taken together, the markers found in the samples offer intriguing evidence that North America had a major impact event about 12,900 years ago."

He was one of the researchers, led byRichard Firestone of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in Berkeley, Calif.

The Clovis culture had spears capable of piercing a mammoth and might have lived by following herds of the giant animals. The Clovis population declined as the animals disappeared, to be replaced by Folsom culture, which arose as the continent warmed after the Younger Dryas period.