Dust from the dino-killing impact ushered in years of global darkness


An illustration of the dinosaur Dakotaraptor steini in the months following the Chicxulub impact about 66 million years ago. (Image credit: Artwork by © Mark A. Garlick)

About 66 million years ago, a city-size asteroid slammed into what is now the Yucatán Peninsula, ushering in a long period of darkness that snuffed out the nonavian dinosaurs. Researchers have long debated exactly what aspect of this event, known as the Chicxulub impact, caused the rapid change in climate. Was it sulfur particles from vaporized sedimentary rocks? Soot from subsequent global wildfires? Or dust from the very bedrock of the Yucatán?

Now, new research argues that dust was the deadliest aspect of the impact. While soot and sulfur contributed to global darkness and an impact winter that halted photosynthesis for nearly two years, fine dust from the granite pulverized in the impact remained aloft in the atmosphere for up to 15 years. The asteroid impact led to a spiral of extinctions that killed 75% of all species on the planet.

Paleoclimate model simulations show dust transport across the planet, indicating that the Cretaceous world was encircled by the silicate dust within a few days following the Chicxulub impact. (Image credit: Simulation by Cem Berk Senel (ROB-VUB))

“We found out that the dust-induced disruption in photosynthetic activity is huge, much larger than what we anticipated before this research,” study leader Cem Berk Senel, a postdoctoral researcher in planetary science at the Royal Observatory of Belgium, told Live Science.