WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The space rock that slammed into Earth 66 million years ago at ... the early evolution of life by serving as "a giant fertilizer bomb" for the bacteria and other single ...
A student aptly called this impact a ‘fertilizer bomb.’ Overall, this is very good news for the evolution of early life on Earth, as impacts would have been much more frequent during the early ...
"Imagine these impacts to be giant fertilizer bombs," Drabon said. A bed of rock showing chunks of ripped up seafloor as debris from a tsunami that followed a huge meteorite impact on Earth dating ...
A meteorite impact 3.26 billion years ago, much larger than the one that wiped out the dinosaurs, may have served as a "giant fertilizer bomb ... that slammed into Earth 66 million years ago ...