Chesapeake Invader - C. Wylie Poag

Chesapeake Invader

Discovering America's Giant Meteorite Crater

(Autor)

Buch | Softcover
168 Seiten
2017
Princeton University Press (Verlag)
978-0-691-60306-3 (ISBN)
37,40 inkl. MwSt
Thirty-five million years ago, a meteorite three miles wide and moving sixty times faster than a bullet slammed into the sea bed near what is now Chesapeake Bay. The impact, more powerful than the combined explosion of every nuclear bomb on Earth, blasted out a crater fifty miles wide and one mile deep. Shock waves radiated through the Earth for thousands of miles, shaking the foundations of the Appalachians, as gigantic waves and winds of white-hot debris transformed the eastern seaboard into a lifeless wasteland. Chesapeake Invader is the story of this cataclysm, told by the man who discovered it happened. Wylie Poag, a senior scientist with the U.S. Geological Survey, explains when and why the catastrophe occurred, what destruction it caused, how scientists unearthed evidence of the impact, and how the meteorite's effects are felt even today. Poag begins by reviewing how scientists in the decades after World War II uncovered a series of seemingly inexplicable geological features along the Virginia coast.
As he worked to interpret one of these puzzling findings in the 1980s in his own field of paleontology, Poag began to suspect that the underlying explanation was the impact of a giant meteorite. He guides us along the path that he and dozens of colleagues subsequently followed as--in true scientific tradition--they combined seemingly outrageous hypotheses, painstaking research, and equal parts good and bad luck as they worked toward the discovery of what turned out to be the largest impact crater in the U.S. We join Poag in the lab, on deep-sea drilling ships, on the road for clues in Virginia, and in heated debates about his findings. He introduces us in clear, accessible language to the science behind meteorite impacts, to life and death on Earth thirty-five million years ago, and to the ways in which the meteorite shaped the Chesapeake Bay area by, for example, determining the Bay's very location and creating the notoriously briny groundwater underneath Virginia. This is a compelling work of geological detective work and a paean to the joys and satisfactions of a life in science. Originally published in 1999.
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Preface ix Acknowledgments xi CHAPTER ONE Telltales 3 CHAPTER TWO Microfossil Magic 20 CHAPTER THREE Tektites 29 CHAPTER FOUR Toms Canyon 42 CHAPTER FIVE Super Tsunami 50 CHAPTER SIX Chesapeake Crater Revealed 53 CHAPTER SEVEN Proof in the Pudding 57 CHAPTER EIGHT A Perilous Path 67 CHAPTER NINE Mass Extinctions 80 CHAPTER TEN Eocene Environments 90 CHAPTER ELEVEN Sinking Sand 104 CHAPTER TWELVE Threatened Ground Waters 115 CHAPTER THIRTEEN Faulty Floor 123 CHAPTER FOURTEEN Seaward Explorer 127 CHAPTER FIFTEEN Buried Treasure 138 CHAPTER SIXTEEN Subterranean Waste 143 CHAPTER SEVENTEEN Chicken Little's Dilemma 147 Glossary 157 Suggestions for Fuither Reading 163 Recommended Sites on the World Wide Web 165 Index 167

Erscheinungsdatum
Reihe/Serie Princeton Legacy Library
Zusatzinfo 16 Maps
Verlagsort New Jersey
Sprache englisch
Maße 152 x 235 mm
Gewicht 28 g
Themenwelt Naturwissenschaften Geowissenschaften Geologie
Naturwissenschaften Physik / Astronomie Astronomie / Astrophysik
ISBN-10 0-691-60306-5 / 0691603065
ISBN-13 978-0-691-60306-3 / 9780691603063
Zustand Neuware
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