Aberdeen Stoneley Lecture

As part of the PESGB GEOLiteracy Tour 2018

17th May 2018

Event phone: 020 7408 2000

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The Chicxulub Impact

                 

Online registration now closed. If you would like to attend this lecture, please buy a ticket on the door – cash only.

The End of an Era

With Prof Joanna Morgan (Professor of Geophysics, Department of Earth Science & Engineering, Imperial College London)

In 1980 Luis Alvarez and co-workers published an article asserting that a large body hit Earth ~66 million years ago and caused the most recent mass extinction, which notably included the dinosaurs.

The evidence for impact was the extraterrestrial composition of a thin clay layer at the boundary between the Mesozoic and Cenozoic Eras.  This became known as the “Impact hypothesis”, and was categorically dismissed by many geologists at the time, on the grounds that only two locations had been studied and the clay layer at these sites might be atypical or just unusual but terrestrial, and that the extinction was gradual and started before the impactor hit Earth.  This boundary clay has now been studied at many sites around the world and is clearly formed from impact ejecta – material from the asteroid and impact site that has been ejected around the globe.  Studies of small fossils in marine sediments, for which the fossil record is more reliable due to high numbers, show that life was thriving and the oceans productive immediately before impact and collapsed precisely at the boundary clay layer.  The cause of the extinctions is still not widely agreed, but it is fairly certain that the impact triggered a nuclear winter – an extended period (3-14 years) when the entire Earth was cold and dark, which is likely to have been catastrophic for photosynthetic life.

It took over 10 years to find the impact site – the crater is buried beneath the surface of the Yucatán continental shelf, Mexico, and has a minimal surface expression.  Geophysical methods have been used to image the crater and determine its size (~200 km in diameter) and structure.  In 2016 we drilled into the impact crater to investigate large crater formation, recovery of life at the impact site (ground zero), habitability of the crater, and improve estimates of the climatic effects of this impact.

Impact image courtesy of Barcroft Productions/BBC

Prof Joanna Morgan

Joanna Morgan is a Professor of Geophysics at Imperial College London. She first became involved with Chicxulub when she co-led a seismic experiment across this impact structure in 1996 to map crater size and structure. Subsequently, she has been involved in the onshore drilling of Chicxulub, and running simulations of ejecta travelling around the globe, including its potential to ignite surface fires. She is part of the full-waveform inversion group at Imperial College, which has developed a 3D high-resolution imaging technique for the petroleum industry to improve images across reservoirs. Professor Morgan has used this novel technology to obtain fine-scale images of the peak ring at Chicxulub and mid-ocean ridges, and is currently working on imaging magma storage beneath the Santorini volcano and the Hikurangi subduction zone.

Timings & Registration

Online registration now closed. If you would like to attend this lecture, please buy a ticket on the door – cash only.

Thursday 17th May

Doors open from 18:00

Lecture will begin at 18:30 followed by a drinks reception at 19:30

Close 20:30

This is a public event;

Share your passion for Geology with your nearest and dearest and make sure you book a place as places are limited!

Tickets due to go on sale from 10am Monday 29th January.

£10.00 each, includes drinks reception

About the Stoneley Lecture Series

The Stoneley Lecture Series is named in honour of Professor Bob Stoneley (1929 – 2008), eminent geologist and educator and an Honorary Member of the PESGB.

The lectures are the PESGB’s flagship outreach events which were established in 2011 with the aim of raising the profile of geology and earth sciences in the public consciousness.

Venue Information

Venue information

Venue name:

Aberdeen Science Centre

Venue address:

179 Constitution Street, Aberdeen, Aberdeenshire, AB24 5TU, United Kingdom