Publication Type Journal Article
Title Biomass preservation in impact melt ejecta
Authors Kieren Torres Howard Melanie J. Bailey Deborah Berhanu Phil A. Bland Gordon Cressey Lauren E. Howard Chris Jeynes Richard Matthewman Zita Martins M. A. Sephton Vlad Stolojan Sasha Verchovsky
Groups
Journal NATURE GEOSCIENCE
Year 2013
Month December
Volume 6
Number 12
Pages 1018-1022
Abstract Meteorites can have played a role in the delivery of the building blocks of life to Earth only if organic compounds are able to survive the high pressures and temperatures of an impact event. Although experimental impact studies have reported the survival of organic compounds(1-6), there are uncertainties in scaling experimental conditions to those of a meteorite impact on Earth(1-6) and organic matter has not been found in highly shocked impact materials in a natural setting. Impact glass linked to the 1.2-km-diameter Darwin crater in western Tasmania(7-9) is strewn over an area exceeding 400 km(2) and is thought to have been ejected by a meteorite impact about 800 kyr ago into terrain consisting of rainforest and swamp(7,10). Here we use pyrolysis-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry to show that biomarkers representative of plant species in the local ecosystem-including cellulose, lignin, aliphatic biopolymer and protein remnants-survived the Darwin impact. We find that inside the impact glass the organic components are trapped in porous carbon spheres. We propose that the organic material was captured within impact melt and preserved when the melt quenched to glass, preventing organic decomposition since the impact. We suggest that organic material can survive capture and transport in products of extreme impact processing, at least for a Darwin-sized impact event.
DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/NGEO1996
ISBN
Publisher
Book Title
ISSN 1752-0894
EISSN 1752-0908
Conference Name
Bibtex ID ISI:000327799500013
Observations
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