Holocene Impact Working Group

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The Holocene Impact Working Group is a group of six scientists who hypothesize that meteorite impacts on Earth are more common than according to current scientific consensus.

The group posits one large impact (equivalent to a 10-megaton bomb) every 1,000 years. This estimate is based on evidence of five to ten large impact events in the last 10,000 years.[citation needed] Satellite observations suggest the presence of many recent impact craters and landforms such as chevrons which some scientists[who?] believe were caused by megatsunamis. The chevrons often point in the direction of specific hypothesized impact craters, the supposition being that the chevrons were deposited by tsunamis originating from the impacts which formed those proposed craters.[citation needed] However, a study of chevrons by University of Washington geologist and tsunami expert Jody Bourgeois shows they are not consistent with the tsunami hypothesis.[1]

The group claims an impact event off the coasts of Australia and Madagascar around 2800 BCE,[2] created an underwater feature it calls Burckle Crater. When the group made the hypothesis public in 2006, they acknowledged it was likely to be controversial: "I wouldn't expect 99.9 per cent of (the scientific community) to agree with us"[3] The hypothesis is contradicted by much of what is currently understood about impacts and tsunamis.

The group is profiled in a 2012 episode of History's Universe series, titled When Space Changed History.[4]

Current and past group members include:

References

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  2. Easterbrook, Gregg. The Sky Is Falling, The Atlantic, June 1, 2008. Retrieved September 14, 2014.
  3. Colvin, Mark. Researchers Claim Link Between Tsunamis and Outer Space, ABC Radio, November 14, 2006.
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External links

Official website