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Time-resolved 2-million-year-old supernova activity discovered in Earth’s microfossil record

Authors :
Boyana Deneva
Georg Rugel
Karin Hain
Shawn Bishop
Silke Merchel
L. Fimiani
J.M. Gómez-Guzmán
Valentyna Chernenko
Nicolai Famulok
Gunther Korschinek
Thomas Faestermann
Ramon Egli
Marianne Hanzlik
Peter Ludwig
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
National Academy of Sciences, 2016.

Abstract

Massive stars, which terminate their evolution as core collapse supernovae, are theoretically predicted to eject more than 1E-5 solar masses of the radioisotope 60Fe. If such an event occurs sufficiently close to our solar system, traces of the supernova debris could be deposited on Earth. Herein, we report a time resolved 60Fe signal residing, at least partially, in a biogenic reservoir. Using accelerator mass spectrometry, this signal was found through the direct detection of live 60Fe atoms contained within secondary iron oxides, among which are magnetofossils, the fossilized chains of magnetite crystals produced by magnetotactic bacteria. The magnetofossils were chemically extracted from two Pacific Ocean sediment drill cores. Our results show that the 60Fe signal onset occurs around 2.6 Ma to 2.8 Ma, near the lower Pleistocene boundary, terminates around 1.7 Ma, and peaks at about 2.2 Ma.<br />Figures from the Supplementary Information are not included due to file size restrictions. Download the, now open access, original article for those details (see doi)

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a97ea8109274c51392ccdfd4279ae3d3