Geological Implications of Impacts of Large Asteroids and Comets on the Earth

Iridium abundance measurements across the Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary in the San Juan and Raton Basins of northern New Mexico
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Published:January 01, 1982
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CiteCitation
C. J. Orth, J. S. Gilmore, J. D. Knight, C. L. Pillmore, R. H. Tschudy, J. E. Fassett, 1982. "Iridium abundance measurements across the Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary in the San Juan and Raton Basins of northern New Mexico", Geological Implications of Impacts of Large Asteroids and Comets on the Earth, Leon T. Silver, Peter H. Schultz
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During the past year we have been measuring trace element abundances and searching for anomalously high iridium (Ir) concentrations in continental sedimentary rocks that span the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary in the Raton and San Juan Basins of northern New Mexico and southern Colorado. Using neutron activation and radiochemical separations, we have identified anomalous concentrations of Ir in samples from two sites in the Raton Basin: in a drill core at York Canyon, about 50 km west of Raton, New Mexico, and in a road cut near the city of Raton. In both cases the anomaly occurs essentially at the base of thin coal beds, across a thickness span of only a few cm and at the same level at which several species of Cretaceous pollen become extinct and the ratio of angiosperm pollen to fern spores drops sharply. The Ir surface density ranges from 8 to 40 × 10−9 g cm−2. In the York Canyon core the Ir concentration reaches a value of 5.6 × 10−9 g/g of rock over a local background of about 10−11 g/g; the Pt abundance distribution is similar to that for Ir, while Au reaches its maximum concentration about 10 cm below the Ir peak. Se, V, Cr, Mn, Co, and Zn are about two-fold more abundant at the anomaly zone than in adjacent zones, and mass spectrometric 244Pu analysis showed the 244Pu/Ir atom ratio ⩽ 1 × 107. In the San Juan Basin we have located a small Ir spike (55 × 10−12 g/g over a local background of 8 × 10−12 g/g) that is accompanied by high concentrations of Co and Mn. It is thought to be due to geochemical enrichment processes.
- C-13/C-12
- carbon
- Cenozoic
- clastic rocks
- Colfax County New Mexico
- Colorado Plateau
- composition
- Cretaceous
- effects
- ejecta
- extinction
- geochemistry
- gold
- Great Plains
- impacts
- iridium
- isotopes
- Kirtland Shale
- lower Tertiary
- Mesozoic
- metals
- New Mexico
- North America
- Ojo Alamo Sandstone
- platinum
- platinum group
- Raton Basin
- Raton Formation
- San Juan Basin
- San Juan County New Mexico
- sedimentary rocks
- stable isotopes
- stratigraphic boundary
- Tertiary
- trace elements
- United States
- Upper Cretaceous
- northern New Mexico
- Poison Canyon Formation
- York Canyon region
- Star Lake region
- Mesa Portales region
- Ce/Sc
- De-na-zin Wash region
- Raton region