prehistoric impact crater buried underneath the Yucatán Peninsula in Mexico
CF2M+28, Chicxulub, Yuc., Mexico
Factsheet
Chicxulub crater Chicxulub impact structure
Impact crater/structure
Confidence Confirmed
Chicxulub crater Chicxulub impact structure
Impact crater/structure
Confidence Confirmed
Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Chicxulub_crater
Chicxulub crater - Wikipedia
5 days ago - The Chicxulub crater is an impact crater buried underneath the Yucatán Peninsula in Mexico. Its center is offshore, but the crater is named after the onshore community of Chicxulub Pueblo (not the larger coastal town of Chicxulub Puerto). It was formed slightly over 66 million years ago when ...
Videos
04:21
The Impact Crater in Mexico which Wiped out the Dinosaurs; Chicxulub ...
09:15
Scientists Finally Solved the Mystery Of The Missing Chicxulub ...
27:21
Scientists Finally Know Where the Dino-Killing Asteroid Ended Up ...
04:08
The 2nd Impact Crater which Wiped out the Dinosaurs; Nadir Crater ...
The Chicxulub Asteroid Impact: A Planetary Game-Changer
Is it possible that the Chicxulub Crater didn’t just kill the Dino’s but also created the Gulf
Chicxulub Crater in Mexico
66 million years ago Damn when I was a kid it was only 65, I'm getting old More on reddit.com
Would we as humans be extinct if another Chixilub asteroid hit Earth?
Chicxulub* More on reddit.com
Are there any pictures of the Chicxulub crater?
Most of the crater has been eroded away in the past 65 million years by normal geologic processes, including a fair bit of plate tectonics. Geologists know what to look for to find clear evidence of its existence and extent, but it's not the kind of thing you can just walk up to and look at. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicxulub_crater That Wikipedia article has a map showing where (on the modern Earth) it was located This reddit post here: https://www.reddit.com/r/Paleontology/comments/1iarzpy/what_the_world_looked_like_during_the_late/ has a map of what the world would have looked like at the end of the Cretaceous period. You can see that the location of the Chicxulub impact would have been further north than where it is today; the entire crater would have been underwater at the time as well. And yes, the asteroid that hit at the time would have been large enough and moving fast enough to cut through the ocean to the continental shelf below and leave a significant crater there. It was a massive thing. The asteroid that made it would have been about the size of a small city (about 6 km or so across). More on reddit.com
What major event is associated with the Chicxulub impact?
The impact is believed to have caused a mass extinction event that wiped out about 80 percent of all species on Earth, including the dinosaurs.
britannica.com
britannica.com › geography & travel › physical geography of land
Chicxulub crater | Description, Features, Geology, Dinosaur ...
What evidence supports the asteroid impact theory for dinosaur extinction?
Evidence for the asteroid impact theory includes a global layer of clay high in iridium, shocked quartz, and tektites, and a lack of sulfur in the crater region, indicating vaporization during the impact.
britannica.com
britannica.com › geography & travel › physical geography of land
Chicxulub crater | Description, Features, Geology, Dinosaur ...
YouTube
youtube.com › shorts › 2KBWJQoClLw
The Asteroid That Ended the Age of Dinosaurs
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LPI
lpi.usra.edu › science › kring › Chicxulub › discovery
Chicxulub Impact Event
The discovery of shocked quartz, shocked feldspar, and impact melts in the Yucatán-6 exploration borehole from the interior of the Chicxulub structure, proved it was an impact crater and that it was produced at the Cretaceous-Tertiary (K-T) boundary. This is a photograph of one of the two samples behind that discovery.
Craterexplorer
craterexplorer.ca › chicxulub-impact-structure
CHICXULUB IMPACT STRUCTURE – Crater Explorer
Chicxulub Crater: A possible Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary impact crater on the Yucatán Peninsula, Mexico Alan R. Hildebrand; Glen T. Penfield; David A. Kring; Mark Pilkington; Antonio Camargo Z.; Stein B. Jacobsen; William V. Boynton Geology (1991) 19 (9): 867–871.
New Scientist
newscientist.com › definition › chicxulub
Chicxulub: The asteroid that killed the dinosaurs | New Scientist
A crater at the edge of the Yucatán peninsula in Mexico was created by a massive asteroid that hit Earth 66 million years ago · At the end of the Cretaceous Period 66 million years ago, an asteroid the size of a city collided with Earth. The Chicxulub impactor, as it is called, was somewhere between 10 and 15 kilometres in diameter...
Reddit
reddit.com › r/geology › is it possible that the chicxulub crater didn’t just kill the dino’s but also created the gulf
r/geology on Reddit: Is it possible that the Chicxulub Crater didn’t just kill the Dino’s but also created the Gulf
August 23, 2023 -
I’m no kind of expert. Except in pattern recognition. Seems plausible. I think of when you throw a rock into sand at an angle it’s the surface in front that gets blown away (misplaced the most)but not what it lands on. And behind it as much. In my thinking hispanola(Haiti/d.r.) was detached during this event. Has there been any geological studies?
UNESCO
whc.unesco.org › en › tentativelists › 5784
Ring of cenotes of Chicxulub Crater, Yucatan - UNESCO World Heritage Centre
The Chicxulub Impact Crater, is a geomorfological formation dating from the end of the Mesozoic era, specifically by the end of the Cretaceous at the limits with the Terciary, that was produced by the impact of a meteorite.
BBC Sky at Night Magazine
skyatnightmagazine.com › space-science › chicxulub-asteroid-killed-dinosaurs
Chicxulub, the asteroid that killed the dinosaurs | BBC Sky at Night Magazine
October 15, 2024 - The calculated formation of this crater coincides with the mass extinction of the dinosaurs around 66 million years ago, and the impactor is believed to have been an asteroid about 10–15km in diameter. For more on asteroids and meteorites, read our interview with Dr Sarah Crowther on the science of space rocks or find out how dogs can help locate meteorites on Earth. An illustration showing the location of the Chicxulub crater, shortly after its formation.
National Geographic
nationalgeographic.com › home › science › last day of the dinosaurs' reign captured in stunning detail
Last day of the dinosaurs' reign captured in stunning detail | National Geographic
Rocks from deep inside the Chicxulub impact crater show what happened in the minutes to hours after one of our planet’s most catastrophic events.
Published May 3, 2021