Thursday, 12 March 2026

The Silverpit - an Impact Structure

 The Silverpit - an Impact Structure

A correspondent brought THIS ARTICLE to my attention. It is based on THIS ACADEMIC PAPER.

I am getting up to speed with Artificial Intelligence (AI) and used ChatGPT to summarise the Science Daily article. I think it did a pretty good job. 

(I am using this free, Bristol University, COURSE to further my knowledge of AI. It seems pretty good so far.)

A recent study has provided strong new evidence that the Silverpit structure beneath the southern North Sea was created by an asteroid impact rather than by geological processes such as salt movement. The feature, first identified in seismic survey data collected during North Sea oil exploration in the early 2000s, had long been debated among geologists. Researchers from Heriot-Watt University have now used improved seismic imaging together with mineral analysis to support the impact interpretation.
According to the study, the impact occurred about 43–46 million years ago, during the Eocene epoch. Scientists estimate that the asteroid responsible was roughly 160 metres in diameter. When it struck the seabed, the collision released immense energy, excavating a large crater and ejecting vast quantities of rock and sediment into the surrounding environment. Seismic data reveal circular structures typical of impact craters, while rock samples show signs of shock metamorphism—microscopic changes in mineral structure produced by extremely high pressures, which are characteristic of meteorite impacts.
The consequences of the collision would have been dramatic. The impact likely generated a massive tsunami, possibly exceeding 100 metres in height, that would have spread across the ancient North Sea basin. Such a wave could have flooded nearby coastlines and significantly altered local landscapes. The event would also have produced a large plume of debris, water, and vapour thrown high into the atmosphere.
For years, many scientists suggested the Silverpit feature might instead be the result of salt tectonics, a process in which underground salt layers move and distort surrounding sediments. The new combination of geophysical and mineralogical evidence, however, provides the clearest support yet for the impact hypothesis.
By confirming the origin of the Silverpit crater, the research adds another entry to the record of asteroid impacts on Earth. It also highlights that significant ocean impacts capable of generating large tsunamis have occurred within relatively recent geological time.






Tuesday, 24 February 2026

Down to Earth Extra March 2026

 Down to Earth Extra March 2026

The March 2026 edition of Down to Earth Extra has been published. You can download it HERE or you can read it below.


Saturday, 21 February 2026

Smiling Crinoids

 Smiling Crinoids

Several people have brought THIS WEB PAGE to my attention and I had spotted it myself. It is a story which ticks so many boxes! Amateur fossil hunter, St Cuthbert, Holy Island and a truly wonderful fossil!

Read the web page and it tells a great story. What I find most interesting is how a very common fossil gets to look like a set of false teeth! 

I wish I had found it!!!





Friday, 13 February 2026

Stonehenge - Complexities Continue.

 Stonehenge - Complexities Continue

The more you look at it the more difficult it is to decipher! The main controversy is how all the various types of stone got there. Were they brought by glaciers or by people?

In THIS ARTICLE ( based on THIS ACADEMIC PAPER) the author looks at the presence of the bluestones. These are believed to come from Ordovician volcanics in Pembrokeshire. The assumption of the academic writers is that if the large stones came because of ice transport, the till which brought them would have small grains with the same provenance. So they collected river sands from Salisbury Plain and separated out zircon and apatite grains.

Zircon and apatite are minerals which preserve evidence of their age. This is especially true of the zircon. 550 zircons were analysed, only 1 has an age similar to the bluestones. Which puts paid to the glacial transport theory - or does it?

Welsh glaciers reached Somerset - could the bluestones have been erratics in Somerset?

No doubt the controversy will continue. In the meantime here is a pretty picture of Stonehenge.



Saturday, 24 January 2026

Down to Earth Extra February 2026

 Down to Earth Extra February 2026

The February 2026 edition of Down to Earth Extra has been published. You can download it HERE or you can read it below.


Saturday, 17 January 2026

T. rex - When did they Stop Growing?

 T. rex - When did they Stop Growing?

THIS ARTICLE in New Scientist, (based on this ACADEMIC PAPER) suggests that they grew until at least forty!

The methodology used is akin to counting tree rings, complicated by the earliest growth rings being destroyed as the bone marrow cavity enlarges. Because of this you need many specimens with overlapping growth stages to allow for this.

And after forty years growth rings are not produced so the maximum age of T. rex cannot be determined.

But only two of the specimens reached the advanced age of forty. 

The New Scientist article makes the research sound very straight forward but the academic paper reveals that the gathering of the evidence is more than just a matter of counting rings. And then we get into the statistics!


Obligatory, scary T. rex picture.


Saturday, 3 January 2026

Down to Earth Extra January 2026 - Replacement

Down to Earth Extra January 2026 - Replacement

The replacement January 2026 edition of Down to Earth Extra has been published. You can download it HERE or you can read it below.