Minggu, 31 Maret 2019

Discovery of fossilized fish may shed light on the day an asteroid hit earth, killing the dinosaurs - KCRG

HELL CREEK, North Dakota (ABC) -- The discovery of a fossilized fish may offer a glimpse into the day an asteroid hit the earth and wiped dinosaurs off the planet 66 million years ago, according to a new study.

A study to be published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences offers a scientific first: a detailed snapshot of the terrible moments right after the Chicxulub impact — the most cataclysmic event known to have befallen life on Earth. (Courtesy: KU News Service)

The "exquisitely-preserved" fossils, some of which are of fish with hot glass in their gills, were found in North Dakota's Hell Creek Formation and are thought to have formed after an asteroid slammed into Mexico, causing flaming debris to rain onto the ground, according to a press release from the University of Kansas.

The fossils offer the first-ever "detailed snapshot of the terrible moments right after the Chicxulub impact — the most cataclysmic event known to have befallen life on Earth," the release states.

The impact wiped out about 75 percent of the animal and plant species living on Earth at the time, including dinosaurs.

The fossilized creatures lived in the vicinity of a deeply chiseled river, according to the release. A rushing surge of water in the minutes after the impact likely created the "tangled mass of freshwater fish, terrestrial vertebrates, trees, branches, logs, marine ammonites and other marine creatures," which were all preserved in a layer in the rock formation discovered by Robert DePalma, a University of Kansas doctoral student in geology.

The fish were killed "pretty suddenly because of the violence of that water," said the study's co-author, David Burnham, preparator of vertebrate paleontology at the University of Kansas Biodiversity Institute. One of the fossilized fish had broken in half after it hit a tree, Burnham said.

Finding these hundreds of ancient fish fossils is even more significant because the fish are cartilaginous instead of bony, and less prone to fossilization, Burnham said. Scientists are also discovering new species within the collection of fossils.

The planet was "inherited" by mammals after the asteroid's impact, Burnham said.

"We've understood that bad things happened right after the impact, but nobody's found this kind of smoking-gun evidence," he said. "People have said, 'We get that this blast killed the dinosaurs, but why don't we have dead bodies everywhere?' Well, now we have bodies. They're not dinosaurs, but I think those will eventually be found, too."

The study will be published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, according to the University of Kansas.

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2019-03-31 21:44:21Z
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Canadiens face obstacles, embrace challenges in playoff bid - NHL.com

WINNIPEG -- The Montreal Canadiens' final three games of the regular season might be the definition of difficult. They will play the Tampa Bay Lightning, the best team in the NHL this season, the Washington Capitals, the defending Stanley Cup champions, and their archrivals, the Toronto Maple Leafs.

They might need wins in all three games to reach the 2019 Stanley Cup Playoffs but no matter, the Canadiens believe they'll be hard to keep out of the postseason.

"We're excited about the opportunity and we're going to rise to the occasion," said forward Max Domi, who had an assist in a crucial 3-1 win against the Winnipeg Jets at Bell MTS Place on Saturday.

[RELATED: Canadiens defeat Jets, keep pace for second wild card in East]

Montreal (42-29-8) is tied with the Columbus Blue Jackets for the second wild card into the Stanley Cup Playoffs from the Eastern Conference, but Columbus has a game in hand. They are each one point behind the Carolina Hurricanes for the first wild card. Carolina also has four games remaining. The Blue Jackets (43) and Hurricanes (41) each has more regulation and overtime wins than the Canadiens (40), which is the first tiebreaker should the teams finish with the same amount of points at the end the season. 

"We've talked about this the whole time -- we're not giving up," Canadiens captain Shea Weber said. "We're not out yet. Six more points available for us. We'll take the next game here and try to win that one and see what happens."

Video: MTL@WPG: Petry blasts one-timer past Hellebuyck

The Canadiens, who host the Lightning at Bell Centre on Tuesday (7:30 p.m. ET; TSN2, RDS, SUN, NHL.TV), are 5-1-1 in the past seven games but the regulation loss came against the Blue Jackets on Tuesday.

It appeared to be a crushing blow to the Candiens' hopes, but they responded with the win over the Jets, who are battling the Nashville Predators for first place in the Central Division. 

"Ups and downs of the season," Weber said. "Obviously that one hurt a little more against Columbus, but we know there was nothing we could do at this point except win our games. We just have to take care of our business. One game at a time.

"We won the first one we set out to win this week. Obviously, we had to do that to win all four. We have a lot of work ahead of us and we've got a good team [to play] on Tuesday so we'll enjoy it for a few minutes and then go home and get ready for Tampa."

Forward Jordan Weal, who had a goal and an assist against the Jets playing on the top line with Jonathan Drouin and Joel Armia, said the schedule in the week ahead suits him just fine.

"We've got three games here against good teams and that's who you want to play, play the best teams to get in because then you'll know we deserve it," said Weal, who was acquired from the Arizona Coyotes for forward Michael Chaput on Feb. 25. 

"It was good to get this one back and stay in the hunt."

Weal has eight points (three goals, five assists) in 13 games for Montreal since the trade. He said that despite the tough road they have faced, the Canadiens' outlook has not wavered over the final weeks of the regular season and that outshooting the Jets 44-24 and earning the road win in Winnipeg proved it.

"Just shows the work ethic of the group in here," he said. "The day I came in here, you could tell it was a group of guys that really likes to be around each other and work for each other. That's really important to be a winning team.

"You've just got to keep pushing and keep pushing and not worry about the outside noise. It's tough. You're going to look at scoreboards. It's everywhere. You're scrolling through your phone and it pops up in your face. You just have to keep pushing."

Video: MTL@WPG: Armia buries Danault's feed for PPG

The schedule doesn't favor the Canadiens. 

Three of the Blue Jackets' four remaining games are against teams that have been eliminated from playoff contention: at the Buffalo Sabres Sunday; at the New York Rangers on Friday and at the Ottawa Senators on Saturday. They host the Boston Bruins, who are second in the Atlantic Division, on Tuesday. The Hurricanes play two games against teams in playoff contention (at the Pittsburgh Penguins Sunday; at the Maple Leafs on Tuesday), but finish the season against two teams that have been eliminated (vs. the New Jersey Devils on Thursday; at the Philadelphia Flyers on Saturday). 

Before the game at Winnipeg, Canadiens coach Claude Julien had the customary stay-the course, believe-in-his players comments about getting back on track after the loss at Columbus.

But his tone turned extra serious when it was suggested to him the Canadiens might need the Blue Jackets or Hurricanes to lose a few games to help them get into the postseason.

"That would help," Julien said. "But at the same time, I don't want our team to not do their job and hope somebody else does it for them. That's kind of where I'm going with our hockey club. I'd like to see us take control of our own destiny, win the games that we have left and hopefully that will get us into the playoffs."

Julien spoke about the Canadiens being an excellent bounce-back team for most of the season, that apart from a couple of weeks, they've not allowed let a poor game or two develop into a long losing streak.

Montreal lost five straight games (0-3-2) from Nov. 19 to 27 and lost four in a row Feb. 9 to 17 (0-3-1), but those were the only instances of streaks greater than two losses in a row all season.

"For the most part we were able to bounce back quickly," he said. "You've got to trust in your players and you've got to trust in your team that they're capable of doing that."

Video: MTL@WPG: Price makes multiple saves to preserve lead

The same would apply late in the season, Julien said.

"We don't go in there and re-invent the game because of where we are in the season," he said. "You don't want to make a mountain of it because you don't want the guys to go out there tight. You want them to go in there loose but to understand the outcome of what's at stake. That's the best way to prepare for a game."

"You go out there, play and hopefully have some wings … play a fast game like we've done this year when we've had success."

Using their speed and making plays with the puck will be the key to it all, just like it has been for Montreal all season, Domi said.

"We've come this far right, so why change now?" he said. "It's a tight-knit group on the ice and off the ice as well. We've worked very hard this year to continue to prove all you guys wrong. We're going to enjoy it and make the most of this."



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April 01, 2019 at 12:56AM

Maple Leafs’ John Tavares expecting more hostility in Long Island rematch - Sportsnet.ca

John Tavares is too diplomatic to say it, but it’s high time the Toronto Maple Leafs show up for a game against his former team.

The New York Islanders, who clinched an improbable playoff spot Saturday night (something the Leafs have yet to accomplish), will host Tavares’ Leafs for the second and final time this season Monday at Nassau Coliseum, where they laid waste to Toronto 6-1 in Tavares’s much-hyped Feb. 28 return game.

“Absolutely, we want to get that one for him, just like when we go back and play San Jose or we go back next year and play L.A., we want to get one for those guys [Patrick Marleau and Jake Muzzin] who played in that area,” said Auston Matthews, following Saturday’s 4-2 loss in Ottawa.

“The first time we played them, the crowd was crazy. A crazy atmosphere. I’m sure it’ll be pretty similar this time, so we obviously want to get this game for John.”

Toronto was also blown out, 4-0, the one time it hosted the Isles this season, on Dec. 29.

The Nassau faithful were nothing short of vicious in how they “welcomed” back Tavares last month, destroying No. 91 sweaters in the parking lot, throwing plastic snakes during warm-up, dressing up in “Pajama Boy” outfits, and chanting expletives at their departed star throughout his video tribute.

So nasty was the reception, Toronto fans felt compelled to give Tavares an extra-warm salute during his first game back at Scotiabank Arena.

“I’m sure it’ll probably be somewhat similar. It is what it is. I’m just going to go out there, try to play well and help the Maple Leafs,” Tavares said.

“It’s just part of it. Hopefully we can play better than we have. Obviously, they’ve played us well, but I don’t think we’ve played our best against them either. Hopefully get a good day to regroup, respond and get back at it.”

Mike Babcock said expects a “fun” affair and declined, at least publicly, to play the win-one-for-JT card.

“We want to win every night. We’re selfish that way. We want to win for one another, we want to win for our fans, we want to win for ourselves. This will be no different,” the coach said.

“You do good things, good things will happen. Get prepared. Let’s go.”

The hostility of Nassau last time was the closest a regular-season hockey atmosphere can get to playoff-level intensity, and with a chance to redeem Tavares, officially clinch a post-season spot and match the franchise road wins records, the Leafs have more than enough incentive to get amped up for the rematch.

“Everyone in our locker room has experienced playing in a tough environment, playing on the road in the playoffs,” Tavares downplayed. “We’ll just get going.”



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April 01, 2019 at 01:09AM

No. 2 Michigan State tops No. 1 Duke to reach Final Four - TSN

WASHINGTON — Cassius Winston put Michigan State on his shoulders and carried the Spartans into the Final Four for the first time since 2015.

The do-everything point guard took over the game when his team faced its biggest deficit and led second-seeded Michigan State to a 68-67 victory over Duke that likely ended Zion Williamson's collegiate career.

Williamson, the presumptive top pick in the NBA Draft and the biggest star of this NCAA Tournament, had a game-high 24 points and 14 rebounds for Duke. But it was Winston who stole the show with 20 points and 10 assists. He made nine of his 23 shots and never shied away from taking it at Duke and shooting at nearly every opportunity in the East Region final Sunday.

"Now is not the time to doubt yourself," Winston said. "We've been working, we've been playing all year to get to these moments. Now's not the time to shy away from those big moments."

The biggest moment is yet to come.

Michigan State will play Texas Tech in one national semifinal Saturday in Minneapolis. Virginia faces Auburn in the other.

"We're not done yet, and it feels good," senior guard Matt McQuaid said.

Winston was the facilitator but the Spartans received a huge boost from their oldest player. Kenny Goins, a fifth-year senior who missed his first four 3-point attempts, drained the go-ahead shot with 34.3 seconds left to put Michigan State up 68-66.

"I was out there, great pass, trusted it and let it go and it went down," Goins said. "As soon as I let it go, I knew it was good. I was ready to celebrate, but I knew I had to get back on defence."

Duke had the chance to tie but Canadian RJ Barrett missed the first of two free throws with 5.2 seconds left. Duke was helpless with only four fouls, and Winston was able to get the ball away from the Duke defenders and dribble out the clock.

"There wasn't enough time so I tried to miss the second one and it went in," said Barrett, a native of Mississauga, Ont.

Michigan State is in the Final Four for the eighth time under coach Tom Izzo, who beat Duke's Mike Krzyzewski for just the second time in 13 meetings and second time in seven NCAA Tournament games. Izzo is in the Final Four for the eighth time in his career and tied Krzyzewski what would have been a record 13th appearance.

"I love you all, I appreciate you all. I'll see you in Minneapolis" Izzo, who wiped away tears, told the celebrating crowd that included Michigan State alumnus Magic Johnson.

Izzo had to navigate foul trouble to big man Xavier Tillman, who was essential in guarding Williamson and factoring in on the offensive end. Tillman played 29 minutes and scored 19 points on 8 of 12 shooting.

Duke fell one step short of the Final Four after finally coming out on the losing end of a nail-biter. The Blue Devils won their previous two NCAA Tournament games by a combined three points, and escaped in the final seconds only when their opponents missed at the buzzer.

Falling short likely ended the college career of Williamson, the freshman sensation expected to leave Duke for the NBA. Interest in Williamson has been so high that CBS dedicated a camera to his every move in the NCAA Tournament.

"We're very upset, obviously, but congrats to Michigan State," Williamson said. "Just looking around the locker room and see your teammates, your brothers and you just think this group will probably never play together again."

Barrett had 21 points — but not the one that could have sent the game into overtime. That's thanks in large part to Winston, who made or assisted on 19 of Michigan State's 30 shots.

"Winston was the difference maker," Krzyzewski said. "He's the best guard we've played against."

REDDISH BACK

Cam Reddish didn't start for Duke but the freshman was the first player off the bench two minutes in after being a game-time decision. Reddish missed the Sweet 16 victory against Virginia Tech on Friday with a left knee injury.

Reddish missed his first two shots before his two free throws gave Duke its first lead at 22-21 with 7:10 left in the first half. Reddish finished with eight points on 2 of 8 shooting.

"Obviously it was sore or whatever but I wanted to be out there with my guys," Reddish said.

MCQUAID'S HIGHLIGHTS

McQuaid dunked the ball in the first half and in the second half had a 360 up-and-under layup that should be a regular feature on highlight reels.

"I don't know what got into me," McQuaid said.

UP NEXT

While this is the Spartans' 10th Final Four, it's the first in program history for their opponent, Texas Tech, which beat Gonzaga to win the West Region.

___

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April 01, 2019 at 06:08AM

Calgary Infernos left shocked by Canadian women's league shutdown - CBC Sports

Dakota Woodworth dreamed of winning the Clarkson Cup but never thought the championship game would be her last time on the ice with her team.

Woodworth, a forward with Calgary Inferno, is one of many left wondering about the future of women's hockey. 

The Canadian Women's Hockey League announced plans Sunday to cease operations, effective May 1.

The abrupt announcement has left players and hockey team staff without a gig for next season, and fans wondering where they'll watch their favourite athletes in the future.

Despite a recent surge of popularity, the league said its business model was "economically unsustainable" and wouldn't last for a 13th season. The league owns the teams, and only starting paying players in 2017-18, from a total budget of $3.7 million.

"We had our most successful year to date, really," Woodworth, 25, said. "This is obviously really surprising and a huge bummer, but at the end of the day, you need capital."

Woodworth found out on a league-wide call with players and staff Sunday morning. Some of her teammates listened in from Finland, where they're preparing for the 2019 IIHF Women's World Championship.

Only a week ago, the Calgary Inferno won the Clarkson Cup, the league championship, in a 5-2 win over LesCanadiennes de MontrĂ©al.

"It was incredible, and that's the hardest part about it," Woodworth said.

Calgary Inferno's Zoe Hickel (bottom left) celebrates after scoring her team's opening goal against Les Canadiennes Montreal during the first period of the 2019 Clarkson Cup game in Toronto, on Sunday, March 24, 2019.THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young (Chris Young/The Canadian Press)

Next steps have yet to be determined. The team was caught off guard and will be meeting in the coming days, general manager Kristen Hagg said.

She'd been involved with the team for five years, first as a player and then as the manager. 

"It's been a bit of a whirlwind morning here, trying to collect my thoughts," Hagg said by phone from her post-season vacation in the U.S. "My phone has been ringing and getting texts nonstop."

The 12-year-old CWHL had teams in North American and China this past season, but struggled financially. 

Popularity had been increasing over the years, with the recent championship game in Toronto drawing a record-setting 175,000 viewers.

Difficulties growing fan base

But it was well-known that recent wins on the ice hadn't been enough to turn into financial success, Hagg said.

"We've had a difficult time getting a foot-hold with the hockey community, the hockey fans in Calgary," she said. "We have a lot of amazing fans but our fan base just hasn't grown at the level you would need it to, to operate a team here."

Many of those fans took to social media Sunday, worrying they won't be able to watch Canada's elite women hockey players next season. Players chimed in with the hashtag, #NoLeague.

The CWHL had four teams in Canada: the Infernos, Markham Thunder, Toronto Furies and Les Canadiennes de MontrĂ©al. There was also a team, Worchester Blades, in Massachusetts and Shenzhen KRS Vanke Rays in China.

"I think everybody's just concerned about the athletes themselves," said Jody Forbes, president of Girls Hockey Calgary. "And about the program and what the future holds for female hockey and our daughters."

'Huge role models'

Girls Hockey Calgary has a licensing agreement with CWHL to use the Inferno logo and colours on jerseys — spending "tens of thousands" on new gear — for 43 branded "Junior Inferno" teams, from Timbits to midget level.

Many of the girls have attended Inferno games and met the Inferno, and Canadian Olympics team, players at different training programs. 

Enrolment nearly tripled to more than 800 girls playing hockey since the partnership began, Forbes said.

"They're huge role models to our girls. They're like the Calgary Flames to our girls," she said. "We'll still wear our Inferno with pride, and we'll always be part of the Inferno family."

Woodworth said her thoughts turned to the girls when she heard news of the league ending on-ice operations. She and others hope they can find a way to keep teams playing, and representing their communities.

"We're still here, we're still going to be here. We still want to be role models for the youth of the sport," Woodworth said. "We're going to find a way to continue to do that, no matter what."



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April 01, 2019 at 05:19AM

Canada forced to take its game to next level at men's world curling championship - CBC.ca

LETHBRIDGE, Alta. – So much has changed in the curling world over the past decade — just ask Canada's skip at the 2019 men's world curling championship.

Skip Kevin Koe is making his fourth appearance for Canada at the world championships. At his first in Italy in 2010, Koe finished the round robin with a 9-2 record before thumping Norway in the gold medal game, 9-3. It was rather easy for Koe and Canada back then.

Since then, the landscape has changed.

"It's so different than my worlds in 2010. Some games weren't that hard to be honest," Koe said. "You knew that going in."

But there are no free spaces on the bingo curling card anymore for Canada at the world championships – the first game of this year's event proved that.

Koe and company needed an extra end to defeat Korea 6-5 in the tournament-opener Saturday afternoon. It was a grind for the Canadians who ultimately prevailed but they know it's going to be a battle all tournament.

WATCH | Koe beats South Korea in extra-end:

Kevin Koe and Team Canada beats South Korea's Soo Hyuk Kim 6-5 at the world men's curling championship. 0:41

"It's totally changed. They never went away. And their strategy has gotten better, Asian teams in particular," Koe said. "We'll have to get better as the week goes, but a win is a win."

Home-ice advantage?

Koe is competing in a worlds on Canadian soil for the first time.

He won the title in 2016 in Basel, Switzerland, but this year's world championship in Lethbridge is extra special for Koe, who lives in Calgary. His family and friends all traveled from Calgary and are here soaking it all up.

"It's awesome. It doesn't get any better being so close to home. It's a great feeling and we'll embrace it all week," Koe said.

This is the 60th men's world curling championship. The first was in Scotland in 1959. Canada has dominated when it's come to this event.

Over the last 59 times this event has been played, Canadian men have won it 36 times – the next closest country is Sweden with eight titles. That said, three of Sweden's eight wins have come in the last six years thanks in part to the play of Swedish skip Nik Edin. Edin defeated Canada's Brad Gushue in the final last year.

Nothing taken for granted

There seems to be more on the line this year at the world championship for Canada, however. Maybe it's because both Canadian teams failed to podium at the Olympics last year. Or maybe it's because of Canada's eighth-place showing at the women's world curling championship just a couple of weeks ago.

There's a restlessness that exists within the Canadian curling community at the moment. Nothing is going to come easy anymore for a country that is so used to being on top of the curling world.

"We know it's going to be a battle," said John Dunn, Koe's coach. "There won't be an easy game at this championship for us. Everyone wants to beat Canada. Be patient. Be disciplined."

The new reality for Canada at international bonspiels – being patient and being disciplined. And taking their curling game to a different level.



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March 31, 2019 at 07:04AM

Entire sky lights up as fireball flashes over Florida Saturday night - AccuWeather.com

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  1. Entire sky lights up as fireball flashes over Florida Saturday night  AccuWeather.com
  2. Meteor lights up the night sky over northern Florida  CNN
  3. Meteor lights up the skies over Florida with bright flash  Fox News
  4. Watch: Massive meteor lights up Florida sky  NOLA.com
  5. A meteor lights up the night sky across the Big Bend, South Georgia  WCTV
  6. View full coverage on Google News

https://www.accuweather.com/en/weather-news/entire-sky-lights-up-as-fireball-flashes-over-florida-saturday-night/70007851

2019-03-31 19:38:00Z
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Asteroid Aftermath: Stunning Fossils Discovery Details the Day Dinosaurs Were Wiped Out - The Weather Channel

An asteroid impact near what's now the Yucatan Peninsula caused giant waves in an inland sea that sloshed into the mouth of a river, leaving a fossilized record of the day the dinosaurs were wiped off the planet.

(Illustration courtesy of Robert DePalma via UC Berkley)
  • A site in North Dakota nicknamed Tanis has perfectly preserved fossils of fish, animals and plants.
  • The fossil layer formed when a killer asteroid struck off what is now the Yucatan Peninsula.
  • Some of the fossilized fish at the site inhaled tiny glass beads formed by the impact.

Buried for 66 million years, a prehistoric graveyard is revealing what happened in the minutes after a giant asteroid slammed into the Earth and wiped out the dinosaurs, a new study says.

The site, part of the Hell Creek Formation in what is now North Dakota, used to lie along an inland sea that divided North America into two land masses.

“Essentially, what we've got there is the geologic equivalent of high-speed film of the very first moments after the impact,” paleontologist Robert DePalma, the study's lead author, told National Geographic.

Perfectly preserved fossils of fish, animals and plants at the site, which is nicknamed Tanis, offer a detailed recording of what happened immediately after the killer asteroid struck off Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula, according to the study to be published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The impact created a giant crater, called Chicxulub, and it ejected tons and tons of vaporized rock and asteroid dust into the atmosphere. The cloud that enveloped the planet led to the extinction of 75 percent of life on Earth and the end of the Cretaceous period.

(MORE: Asteroid That Wiped Out Dinosaurs Plunged Earth Into Catastrophic, Years-Long 'Winter', Study Says)

“We’ve understood that bad things happened right after the impact, but nobody’s found this kind of smoking-gun evidence,” study co-author David Burnham of the University of Kansas Biodiversity Institute said in a statement. “People have said, ‘We get that this blast killed the dinosaurs, but why don’t we have dead bodies everywhere?’ Well, now we have bodies. They’re not dinosaurs, but I think those will eventually be found, too.”

Within 45 minutes to an hour, thousands of tiny glass beads formed by the impact began to rain down on the site. Some of these beads, called tektites, were inhaled by the fish in the inland sea, according to a University of California Berkley news release about the study. The tektites would later be found stuck in the fishes' gills. Other tektites, zooming out of the atmosphere at 100 to 200 mph, landed in the mud left by waves from the inland sea. Others are thought to have caused wildfires across the entire continent.

The asteroid's impact also set off shockwaves that caused the inland sea to slosh like water in a bathtub. The waves washed sturgeon, paddlefish and other marine creatures onto a sandbar at the mouth of a river where they were stranded.

Fossilized fish stacked atop each other suggests they were flung ashore and died stranded together on a sand bar after the waves from the inland sea withdrew.

(Courtesy of Robert DePalma via UC Berkley)

The tektites and other debris from the impact fell for another 10 to 20 minutes. Another big wave sloshed out of the sea and covered everything with sand, gravel and fine sediment.

“A tangled mass of freshwater fish, terrestrial vertebrates, trees, branches, logs, marine ammonites and other marine creatures was all packed into this layer by the inland-directed surge,” said DePalma, a University of Kansas doctoral student and a curator at the Palm Beach Museum of Natural History in Florida.

In addition to fish and marine organisms, DePalma, who has worked at the site not far from Bowman, North Dakota, for the past six years, has found parts of a triceratops, a duck-billed hadrosaur, insects, mammals, bones from a marine reptile called a mosasaur, and burned trees and conifer branches. He also found feathers that may have belonged to a dinosaur, according to an extensive article about the find in the New Yorker.

They're all in the sedimentary layer known as the K-T boundary that marks the end of the Cretaceous period and the beginning of the Tertiary period. It's also called the K-Pg boundary.

“This is the first mass death assemblage of large organisms anyone has found associated with the K-T boundary,” DePalma said. “At no other K-T boundary section on Earth can you find such a collection consisting of a large number of species representing different ages of organisms and different stages of life, all of which died at the same time, on the same day.”

(WATCH: Ancient Jewish Village Discovered Underneath Jerusalem)

Mark Richards, a UC Berkeley professor emeritus and professor of earth and space sciences at the University of Washington, said, “It’s like a museum of the end of the Cretaceous in a layer a meter-and-a-half thick."

DePalma said, “It’s difficult not to get choked up and passionate about this topic. We look at moment-by-moment records of one of the most notable impact events in Earth’s history. No other site has a record quite like that. And this particular event is tied directly to all of us — to every mammal on Earth, in fact. Because this is essentially where we inherited the planet. Nothing was the same after that impact. It became a planet of mammals rather than a planet of dinosaurs."

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https://weather.com/news/news/2019-03-31-fossils-detail-day-asteroid-wiped-out-dinosaurs

2019-03-31 19:08:22Z
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Meteor lights up the skies over Florida with bright flash - Fox News

A mysterious fireball that lit up the skies over Northern Florida on Saturday night turned out to be a meteor that was picked up on weather radar, according to officials.

The falling space rock was reported around 11:52 p.m. over Taylor County, the National Weather Service's Tallahassee office said on Twitter.

The flash from the meteor was so bright it was picked up on weather satellites that are typically used to track thunderstorms and lightning.

US DETECTS METEOR EXPLOSION 10 TIMES THE ENERGY AS ATOMIC BOMB: REPORT

The NWS posted a photo where the fireball was picked up by the GOES Lightning Mapper

Another weather service office in Charleston, S.C., also shared the light that was detected from the fireball as it streaked across the sky.

'METEOR' OVER LOS ANGELES TURNS OUT TO BE STUNT FOR LAST SUPERMOON OF 2019

Officials said they haven't received any reports of where the meteor possibly landed or if it broke up in the atmosphere. Residents in Georgia and South Carolina also reported seeing the flash.

CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

Meteors are what happened when meteoroids -- what we call "space rocks" -- enter Earth’s atmosphere at a high speed and burn up, according to NASA.

"This is also when we refer to them as 'shooting stars,'” the agency notes. "Sometimes meteors can even appear brighter than Venus -- that’s when we call them 'fireballs.'"

Scientists estimate that about 48.5 tons (44,000 kilograms) of meteoritic material falls on Earth each day, according to NASA.

"When a meteoroid survives its trip through the atmosphere and hits the ground, it’s called a meteorite," the space agency states.

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2019-03-31 18:34:16Z
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Meteor lights up the skies over Florida with bright flash - Fox News

A mysterious fireball that lit up the skies over Northern Florida on Saturday night turned out to be a meteor that was picked up on weather radar, according to officials.

The falling space rock was reported around 11:52 p.m. over Taylor County, the National Weather Service's Tallahassee office said on Twitter.

The flash from the meteor was so bright it was picked up on weather satellites that are typically used to track thunderstorms and lightning.

US DETECTS METEOR EXPLOSION 10 TIMES THE ENERGY AS ATOMIC BOMB: REPORT

The NWS posted a photo where the fireball was picked up by the GOES Lightning Mapper

Another weather service office in Charleston, S.C., also shared the light that was detected from the fireball as it streaked across the sky.

'METEOR' OVER LOS ANGELES TURNS OUT TO BE STUNT FOR LAST SUPERMOON OF 2019

Officials said they haven't received any reports of where the meteor possibly landed or if it broke up in the atmosphere. Residents in Georgia and South Carolina also reported seeing the flash.

CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

Meteors are what happened when meteoroids -- what we call "space rocks" -- enter Earth’s atmosphere at a high speed and burn up, according to NASA.

"This is also when we refer to them as 'shooting stars,'” the agency notes. "Sometimes meteors can even appear brighter than Venus -- that’s when we call them 'fireballs.'"

Scientists estimate that about 48.5 tons (44,000 kilograms) of meteoritic material falls on Earth each day, according to NASA.

"When a meteoroid survives its trip through the atmosphere and hits the ground, it’s called a meteorite," the space agency states.

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https://www.foxnews.com/science/meteor-lights-up-the-skies-over-florida-with-bright-flash

2019-03-31 16:48:50Z
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Fossilized fish discovery may shed light on the day a major asteroid hit earth - ABC News

The discovery of a fossilized fish may offer a glimpse into the day an asteroid hit the earth and wiped dinosaurs off the planet 66 million years ago, according to a new study.

The "exquisitely-preserved" fossils, some of which are of fish with hot glass in their gills, were found in North Dakota's Hell Creek Formation and are thought to have formed after an asteroid slammed into Mexico, causing flaming debris to rain onto the ground, according to a press release from the University of Kansas.

The fossils offer the first-ever "detailed snapshot of the terrible moments right after the Chicxulub impact — the most cataclysmic event known to have befallen life on Earth," the release states.

This photo taken, March 29, 2019, by the University of Kansas,shows a partially exposed, perfectly preserved 66-million-year-old fish fossil uncovered.The site appears to date to the day 66 million years ago when a meteor hit Earth, killing nearly all life on the planet.(Robert DePalma/Kansas University/AFP/Getty Images) This photo taken, March 29, 2019, by the University of Kansas,shows a partially exposed, perfectly preserved 66-million-year-old fish fossil uncovered.The site appears to date to the day 66 million years ago when a meteor hit Earth, killing nearly all life on the planet.

The impact wiped out about 75 percent of the animal and plant species living on Earth at the time, including dinosaurs.

The fossilized creatures lived in the vicinity of a deeply chiseled river, according to the release. A rushing surge of water in the minutes after the impact likely created the "tangled mass of freshwater fish, terrestrial vertebrates, trees, branches, logs, marine ammonites and other marine creatures," which were all preserved in a layer in the rock formation discovered by Robert DePalma, a University of Kansas doctoral student in geology.

The fish were killed "pretty suddenly because of the violence of that water," said the study's co-author, David Burnham, preparator of vertebrate paleontology at the University of Kansas Biodiversity Institute. One of the fossilized fish had broken in half after it hit a tree, Burnham said.

Finding these hundreds of ancient fish fossils is even more significant because the fish are cartilaginous instead of bony, and less prone to fossilization, Burnham said. Scientists are also discovering new species within the collection of fossils.

The University of Kansas' Robert DePalma(L)and field assistant Kylie Ruble(R) excavate fossil carcasses from the Tanis deposit, March 29, 2019.(Robert DePalma/Kansas University/AFP/Getty Images) The University of Kansas' Robert DePalma(L)and field assistant Kylie Ruble(R) excavate fossil carcasses from the Tanis deposit, March 29, 2019.

The planet was "inherited" by mammals after the asteroid's impact, Burnham said.

“We’ve understood that bad things happened right after the impact, but nobody’s found this kind of smoking-gun evidence,” he said. “People have said, ‘We get that this blast killed the dinosaurs, but why don’t we have dead bodies everywhere?’ Well, now we have bodies. They’re not dinosaurs, but I think those will eventually be found, too.”

The study will be published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, according to the University of Kansas.

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2019-03-31 16:15:05Z
52780254054407

Meteor lights up the skies over Florida with bright flash - Fox News

A mysterious fireball that lit up the skies over Northern Florida on Saturday night turned out to be a meteor that was picked up on weather radar, according to officials.

The falling space rock was reported around 11:52 p.m. over Taylor County, the National Weather Service's Tallahassee office said on Twitter.

The flash from the meteor was so bright it was picked up on weather satellites that are typically used to track thunderstorms and lightning.

US DETECTS METEOR EXPLOSION 10 TIMES THE ENERGY AS ATOMIC BOMB: REPORT

The NWS posted a photo where the fireball was picked up by the GOES Lightning Mapper

Another weather service office in Charleston, S.C., also shared the light that was detected from the fireball as it streaked across the sky.

'METEOR' OVER LOS ANGELES TURNS OUT TO BE STUNT FOR LAST SUPERMOON OF 2019

Officials said they haven't received any reports of where the meteor possibly landed or if it broke up in the atmosphere. Residents in Georgia and South Carolina also reported seeing the flash.

CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

Meteors are what happened when meteoroids -- what we call "space rocks" -- enter Earth’s atmosphere at a high speed and burn up, according to NASA.

"This is also when we refer to them as 'shooting stars,'” the agency notes. "Sometimes meteors can even appear brighter than Venus -- that’s when we call them 'fireballs.'"

Scientists estimate that about 48.5 tons (44,000 kilograms) of meteoritic material falls on Earth each day, according to NASA.

"When a meteoroid survives its trip through the atmosphere and hits the ground, it’s called a meteorite," the space agency states.

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https://www.foxnews.com/science/meteor-lights-up-the-skies-over-florida-with-bright-flash

2019-03-31 16:24:29Z
52780256058441

NASA released a stunning photo showing two galaxies colliding - Business Insider

Hubble’s Dazzling Display of two Colliding GalaxiesThe two galaxies that form NGC 6052 are now so close that the boundaries are no longer clear.ESA/Hubble & NASA, A. Adamo et al.

  • Originally discovered in 1784, NGC 6052 was first thought to be one galaxy with an unusual shape.
  • Scientists eventually discovered that it was, in fact, two galaxies in the process of colliding.
  • Having previously been observed by the Hubble telescope in 2015, NASA recently released a stunning image of the galaxies in even closer detail.

First discovered in 1784 by William Herschel, NGC 6052 was originally thought to be a singular galaxy that simply had an odd shape.

However, scientists eventually figured out that the "oddly shaped galaxy" 230 million light-years away was, in fact, two galaxies in the process of colliding.

Having previously been observed by the Hubble telescope with an older camera in 2015, NASA recently released a stunning image of the galaxies in even better detail.

This object was previously observed by Hubble with its old Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2). That image was released in 2015.  This object was previously observed by Hubble with its old Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2) in 2015.ESA/Hubble & NASA, Acknowledgement: Judy Schmidt

The two galaxies that form NGC 6052 are now so close that the boundaries are no longer clear and the original galaxies are losing their shape at a quickening pace.

Read more: Astronomers have discovered hundreds of thousands of new galaxies in a tiny section of the universe

"Eventually, this new galaxy will settle down into a stable shape, which may not resemble either of the two original galaxies," explained the European Space Agency. A complete fusion would throw the stars out of their original orbits and take new places.

According to NASA, as well as the union of the two galaxies being beautiful and fascinating, it's also very rare due to the fact that galaxies are mostly comprised of empty space.

In about four billion years the Milky Way and Andromeda are to collide and join to form one single galaxy. For now, however, the scientists are still researching NGC 6052.

Den Originalartikel gibt es auf Business Insider Deutschland. This post originally appeared on Business Insider Deutschland and has been translated from German. Copyright 2019. Und ihr könnt Business Insider Deutschland auf Twitter folgen.

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https://www.businessinsider.com/nasa-releases-stunning-photo-showing-two-galaxies-colliding-2019-3

2019-03-31 11:09:19Z
CBMiYmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJ1c2luZXNzaW5zaWRlci5jb20vbmFzYS1yZWxlYXNlcy1zdHVubmluZy1waG90by1zaG93aW5nLXR3by1nYWxheGllcy1jb2xsaWRpbmctMjAxOS0z0gGyAWh0dHBzOi8vYW1wLWJ1c2luZXNzaW5zaWRlci1jb20uY2RuLmFtcHByb2plY3Qub3JnL3Yvcy9hbXAuYnVzaW5lc3NpbnNpZGVyLmNvbS9uYXNhLXJlbGVhc2VzLXN0dW5uaW5nLXBob3RvLXNob3dpbmctdHdvLWdhbGF4aWVzLWNvbGxpZGluZy0yMDE5LTM_YW1wX2pzX3Y9MC4xI3dlYnZpZXc9MSZjYXA9c3dpcGU

Fossil Motherlode Reveals The Aftermath Of The Asteroid Impact That Wiped Out The Dinosaurs - Forbes

Scientists have uncovered the fossil motherlode – an incredible mash-up of fish, animals and plant life that was flash-preserved in the moments after the asteroid impact that probably killed the dinosaurs.

At a site called Tanis in North Dakota’s Hell Creek Formation, a team of palaeontologists from the University of Kansas unearthed the remains, so finely preserved that the gills of the fishes still contain debris that they breathed right before they died.

“We’ve understood that bad things happened right after the impact, but nobody’s found this kind of smoking-gun evidence,” said co-author David Burnham, preparator of vertebrate paleontology at the KU Biodiversity Institute, in a statement. “People have said, ‘We get that this blast killed the dinosaurs, but why don’t we have dead bodies everywhere?’ Well, now we have bodies. They’re not dinosaurs, but I think those will eventually be found, too.”

Illustration of a ten-kilometre-wide asteroid entering the Earth's atmosphere as dinosaurs, including T. rex, look on. (Credit: Getty)

Getty

The massive Chicxulub impact – the most cataclysmic event known to have befallen life on Earth – is widely held responsible for the end of the dinosaurs. This single event toppled the prehistoric lizards from the top of the food chain and allowed mammals to inherit the Earth.

“It’s difficult not to get choked up and passionate about this topic,” said lead author Robert DePalma, a KU doctoral student in geology who works in the KU Biodiversity Institute and Natural History Museum. “We look at moment-by-moment records of one of the most notable impact events in Earth’s history. No other site has a record quite like that. And this particular event is tied directly to all of us — to every mammal on Earth, in fact. Because this is essentially where we inherited the planet. Nothing was the same after that impact. It became a planet of mammals rather than a planet of dinosaurs.”

Of course, not only dinosaurs were hit by this awesome event, a plethora of animals were wiped out. The fossil find by the KU palaeontologists shows a snapshot of this vibrant ecosystem.

“A tangled mass of freshwater fish, terrestrial vertebrates, trees, branches, logs, marine ammonites and other marine creatures was all packed into this layer by the inland-directed surge,” said DePalma.

“Timing of the incoming ejecta spherules matched the calculated arrival times of seismic waves from the impact, suggesting that the impact could very well have triggered the surge.”

This wasn’t a tsunami that arrived after the impact – but a seismic surge that pushed the waters into chaos.

“A tsunami would have taken at least 17 or more hours to reach the site from the crater, but seismic waves - and a subsequent surge - would have reached it in tens of minutes,” said DePalma.

Just before the surge arrived, the animals in the area had already breathed in the first clouds of dust, ash and debris thrown up by the incredible impact.

“The fish were buried quickly, but not so quickly they didn’t have time to breathe the ejecta that was raining down to the river,” said Burnham.

“These fish weren’t bottom feeders, they breathed these in while swimming in the water column. We’re finding little pieces of ejecta in the gill rakers of these fish, the bony supports for the gills. We don’t know if some were killed by breathing this ejecta, too.”

Unlike most fossilisation, these remains are preserved in three dimensions, a catalogue of many hundreds of ancient fish that show the biodiversity of the region.

“The sedimentation happened so quickly everything is preserved in three dimensions — they’re not crushed,” Burnham said. “It’s like an avalanche that collapses almost like a liquid, then sets like concrete. They were killed pretty suddenly because of the violence of that water. We have one fish that hit a tree and was broken in half.”

The fossil find has not only uncovered new species and given researchers some of their best specimens of known ancient fish, but also offers new opportunities to learn about cataclysmic events like this one.

"As human beings, we descended from a lineage that literally survived in the ashes of what was once the glorious kingdom of the dinosaurs. And we’re the only species on the planet that has ever been capable of learning from such an event to the benefit of ourselves and every other organism in our world,” said DePalma.

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https://www.forbes.com/sites/bridaineparnell/2019/03/30/fossil-motherlode-reveals-the-aftermath-of-the-asteroid-impact-that-wiped-out-the-dinosaurs/

2019-03-30 20:15:00Z
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Sabtu, 30 Maret 2019

Fossil 'mother lode' records Earth-shaking asteroid's impact: study - Yahoo News

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This handout shows a tangled mass of articulated fish fossils uncovered in North Dakota at a site believed to date to the day 66 million years ago when an asteroid sruck Earth, killing nearly all life on the planet

This handout shows a tangled mass of articulated fish fossils uncovered in North Dakota at a site believed to date to the day 66 million years ago when an asteroid sruck Earth, killing nearly all life on the planet. (AFP Photo/Robert DePalma)

Washington (AFP) - Scientists in the US say they have discovered the fossilized remains of a mass of creatures that died minutes after a huge asteroid slammed into the Earth 66 million years ago, sealing the fate of the dinosaurs.

In a paper to be published Monday, a team of paleontologists headquartered at the University of Kansas say they found a "mother lode of exquisitely preserved animal and fish fossils" in what is now North Dakota.

The asteroid's impact in what is now Mexico was the most cataclysmic event ever known to befall Earth, eradicating 75 percent of the planet's animal and plant species, extinguishing the dinosaurs and paving the way for the rise of humans.

Researchers believe the impact set off fast-moving, seismic surges that triggered a sudden, massive torrent of water and debris from an arm of an inland sea known as the Western Interior Seaway.

At the Tanis site in North Dakota's Hell Creek Formation, the surge left "a tangled mass of freshwater fish, terrestrial vertebrates, trees, branches, logs, marine ammonites and other marine creatures," according to Robert DePalma, the report's lead author.

Some of the fish fossils were found to have inhaled "ejecta" associated with the Chicxulub event, suggesting seismic surges reached North Dakota within "tens of minutes," he said.

"The sedimentation happened so quickly everything is preserved in three dimensions -- they're not crushed," said co-author David Burnham.

"It's like an avalanche that collapses almost like a liquid, then sets like concrete. They were killed pretty suddenly because of the violence of that water. We have one fish that hit a tree and was broken in half."

The fossils at Tanis include what were believed to be several newly identified fish species, and others that were "the best examples of their kind," said DePalma, a graduate student and curator of the Palm Beach Museum of Natural History in Florida.

"We look at moment-by-moment records of one of the most notable impact events in Earth's history. No other site has a record quite like that," he said.

"And this particular event is tied directly to all of us -- to every mammal on Earth, in fact. Because this is essentially where we inherited the planet. Nothing was the same after that impact. It became a planet of mammals rather than a planet of dinosaurs."

The paper is to be published in the Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences.

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https://www.yahoo.com/news/fossil-mother-lode-records-earth-shaking-asteroids-impact-182904141.html

2019-03-30 18:29:00Z
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Toronto FC 4, New York City FC 0 - March 29, 2019 - torontofc.ca

It was the Alejandro Pozuelo show at BMO Field, as Toronto FC's newest Designated Playermade his MLS debut in style in a 4-0 win over New York City FC on Friday.

The Spaniard, joining after playing nearly a whole season for Belgian club Genk, showed up in full fitness, as he scored an audacious brace and an assist in a sparkling North American debut.

Pozuelo set up Jozy Altidore, starting his first game of the season, with a throughball to set up a good chance in the 7th minute. Less than two minutes later, TFC thought they opened the scoring as Justin Morrow indirectly set up his own deflected shot, but a subsequent Video Review chalked it off due to offside and the game remained scoreless. Pozuelo deflected another goal in midway through the first half, but that was also called off because he was standing offside when the ball was played.

They finally found the breakthrough in the 29th minute, as Pozuelo showed his magic in the buildup from the center line all the way to the penalty spot, before sending a low square ball to Altidore to finish.

The home side's lead doubled in the 58th minute, after Altidore drew a penalty and Pozuelo stepped up to the spot, scoring with a wicked off-speed panenka spot kick to open his account. He then raised the ante further, as he scored a looping chip from the run of play that looked completely effortless and left NYCFC goalkeeper Sean Johnson flummoxed.

Substitute Jay Chapman offered a further exclamation point on the evening, as he hit a sharp one-timer to make it a true rout for Toronto.



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March 30, 2019 at 10:03AM

Auger-Aliassime falls to Isner in Miami - TSN

Series Tied Leads Wins Wins Leads Leads Leads Wins Wins 0-0 - - -

Draw



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March 30, 2019 at 02:06AM

Bats Reappear, Shoemaker Dominant In First Win of the Season - Bluebird Banter

Blue Jays 6, Tigers 0

For the first few innings, it looked like history was about to repeat itself. Drury led off the game clubbing a triple off the wall only to be wasted as the Jays struck out the next three at bats. Matt Boyd struck out seven batters in the first three innings, helping the Blue Jays set a new franchise record for scoreless innings to open a season.

In the fourth, the Jays managed to put together four runs, as a walk to Grichuk and back to back singles to Smoak and Hernandez drove in the first run of the season for Toronto. After yet another strike out and a remarkably common pop out from Pillar, McKinney hit a dribbler that Josh Harrison couldn’t come up with, leaving the bases safely loaded. Galvis hit a sharp single into centre that cleared the bases when Mikie Mahtook dropped the ball during the transfer and threw it into the turf for good measure, letting Galvis go all the way to third. The Jays added two more off Blaine Hardy when a Galvis single and a Maile walk were able to advance on a soft grounder by Grichuk. Smoak hit a groundball into left field to score Galvis and Maile.

Matt Shoemaker was tremendous, pitching 7 innings and allowing just 2 hits and two walks, while striking out seven. The only real threat he faced was in the sixth, when Nick Castellanos tripled off the wall with one out. Castellanos was caught too far off third on a Miguel Cabrera groundball and was tagged out in the run down. Javy Guerra pitched a perfect two innings to finish off the game.

Jays of the Day: Matt Shoemaker, Freddy Galvis

Suckage: It’s the first win of the season, so let’s say none for today.

In the game thread, we had 1008 comments and Belisarius led the way with 133 comments! I think it is pretty obvious that we’ve been missing real baseball.



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March 30, 2019 at 09:20AM

Jays’ Stroman overcomes nerves to shine in second Opening Day start - 680 News

TORONTO – Minutes before taking the mound for the second Opening Day start of his career, Marcus Stroman began the familiar walk in from the Rogers Centre bullpen. At his side were pitching coach Pete Walker and catcher Danny Jansen. Over his jersey, he wore a vintage Blue Jays jacket that wouldn’t have looked out of place on Dave Stieb or Jimmy Key.

As he walked toward the Blue Jays’ third-base dugout, Stroman felt a mix of nerves and excitement.

“I don’t eat on days I pitch,” Stroman said. “I want to throw up from the second I wake up, but it lets you know that it’s game day. I love it. It gives me those exciting nerves that I need in my stomach.”

Perhaps unsurprisingly, Stroman’s first pitch of the afternoon missed the zone. His next three offerings weren’t much closer. Afterward, he acknowledged he was “a little too amped up” for the visiting Detroit Tigers.

But Stroman recovered from the leadoff walk with a couple of ground balls and just kept going from there. It wasn’t until the sixth inning that the Tigers even recorded a hit, and when Grayson Greiner whiffed on diving slider to end the top of the seventh inning, Detroit still hadn’t scored a run.

True to form, Stroman punctuated the strikeout with a roar and shoulder shimmy before returning to the third-base dugout for congratulations.

“I love these games,” Stroman said. “I love feeling the energy of the crowd from the second that I walk out there. I feel like as far as big-time games, there’s nobody I’d want out there more than me.”

Over the course of those seven scoreless innings, Stroman allowed two hits and four walks while striking out seven. All things considered, his season debut went about as well as the Blue Jays could have hoped. The Tigers won 2-0 Thursday, but just as importantly Stroman felt healthy and an injury-marred season receded a little further into the background.

Even setting aside his pitching line, Stroman felt physically capable of throwing all of his pitches. In that sense, Thursday’s start represented meaningful progress from 2018, when Stroman posted a 5.54 ERA while dealing with shoulder and blister issues.

“I had a pretty bad year last year,” Stroman said. “I did everything in my power to get right this off-season and I did. I’m just excited to toe the rubber every fifth day.”

When spring training began the Blue Jays had no way of knowing what to expect from Stroman, who ended last season on the sidelines because of a blister issue. Six weeks later, he’s where he wants to be physically.

“I’m back to throwing whatever pitch I want in whatever count,” Stroman said. “Last year I’d go into games and throw one pitch. Two pitches. I have six pitches.”

Granted, the Tigers project as a 90-loss team, so there’s risk in reading too closely into the results of any one game. But if Stroman can return to the level he pitched at in 2016 and 2017, when he averaged 200-plus innings per season, it would provide manager Charlie Montoyo with at least one stable arm in a rotation that includes plenty of uncertainty.

“Marcus was outstanding,” Montoyo said. “He had no room for error and he gave us a chance. That’s all you can ask from a pitcher. He was very good.”

For Stroman, the season-opening assignment was the second of his career along with 2016. Behind the plate, Jansen was experiencing the excitement and pageantry of a big-league Opening Day for the first time. Adding to the challenge, he had never caught Stroman in a big-league game.

Once some initial nerves subsided, Jansen worked well with Stroman, relying heavily on a breaking ball that generated 11 swinging strikes on its own. Afterward, Jansen called the pitch “a big weapon” for Stroman.

“It was just on,” Jansen said. “Any time we really needed it that was one we went to.”

The only pitch Jansen called more frequently was his two-seam fastball, a pitch that averaged 93 mph Thursday. Given the circumstances, the first pairing of Stroman and Jansen went smoothly.

“He’s still thinking out there and we’re still on the same page, but for the most part, he’s just going to roll with what I’ve got,” Jansen said. “A couple times he shook, but it’s pretty good so far. We’re going to keep building it.”

If Stroman sustains these results for long enough, contending teams will eventually restart trade talks with the Blue Jays. At that point, general manager Ross Atkins would have to seriously consider moving Stroman, who’s eligible for free agency after next season.

For now, those talks are likely still a ways off. In the meantime, the Blue Jays have a little more reason to believe that Stroman’s injuries truly are behind him.



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March 29, 2019 at 04:14PM

Catastrophic New Details From The 'Day The Dinosaurs Died' Uncovered in Fossils - ScienceAlert

Sixty-six million years ago, a massive asteroid crashed into a shallow sea near Mexico. The impact carved out a 90-mile-wide crater and flung mountains of earth into space. Earthbound debris fell to the planet in droplets of molten rock and glass.

Ancient fish caught glass blobs in their gills as they swam, gape-mouthed, beneath the strange rain. Large, sloshing waves threw animals onto dry land, then more waves buried them in silt.

Scientists working in North Dakota recently dug up fossils of these fish: They died within the first minutes or hours after the asteroid hit, according to a paper published Friday in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, a discovery that has sparked tremendous excitement among paleontologists.

"You're going back to the day that the dinosaurs died," said Timothy Bralower, a Pennsylvania State University paleoceanographer who is studying the impact crater and was not involved with this work.

"That's what this is. This is the day the dinosaurs died."

About 3 in 4 species perished in what is called the Cretaceous-Paleogene extinction, also known as the K-Pg event or K-T extinction. The killer asteroid most famously claimed the dinosaurs.

But the T. rex and the triceratops were joined by hordes of other living things. Freshwater and marine creatures were victims, as were plants and microorganisms, including 93 percent of plankton. (A lone branch of dinosaurs, the birds, lives on.)

Four decades of research buttresses the asteroid extinction theory, widely embraced as the most plausible explanation for the disappearance of dinosaurs.

In the late 1970s, Luis and Walter Alvarez, a father-son scientist duo at the University of California at Berkeley, examined an unusual geologic layer between the Cretaceous and Paleogene periods. The boundary was full of the element iridium, which is rare in Earth's crust but not in asteroids. Walter Alvarez is one of the authors of the new study.

The Hell Creek fossils represent "the first mass death assemblage of large organisms anyone has found" that sits at the K-Pg boundary, study author Robert DePalma said in a statement.

DePalma, a doctoral student at the University of Kansas, began excavating the site at North Dakota's Hell Creek formation in 2013. Since then, DePalma and other paleontologists have found heaps of fossilized sturgeon and paddlefish with glass spheres still in their gills.

They found squidlike animals called ammonites, shark teeth and the remains of predatory aquatic lizards called mosasaurs. They found dead mammals, insects, trees and a triceratops. They found foot-long fossil feathers, dinosaur tracks and prehistoric mammal burrows. They found fossilized tree gunk called amber that had captured the glass spheres, too.

The site has "all the trademark signals from the Chicxulub impact," Bralower said, including the glass beads and lots of iridium. In the geologic layer just above the fossil deposit, ferns dominate, the signs of a recovering ecosystem. "It's spellbinding," he said.

In the early 1990s, researchers found the scar left by the asteroid — a crater in the Yucatan Peninsula. The impact was named after the nearby Mexican town of Chicxulub. Suggested "kill mechanisms" for the Chicxulub impact abound: It may have poisoned the planet with heavy metals, turned the ocean to acid, shrouded Earth in darkness or ignited global firestorms. Its punch may have triggered volcanoes that spewedlike shaken soda cans.

Hell Creek is more than 2,000 miles from the Chicxulub crater. But a hail of glass beads, called tektites, rained there within 15 minutes of the impact, said study author Jan Smit, a paleontologist at Vrije University in Amsterdam who also was an early discoverer of iridium at the K-Pg boundary.

The fish, pressed in the mud like flowers in a diary, are remarkably well-preserved. "It's the equivalent of finding people in life positions buried by ash after Pompeii," Bralower said.

At the time of the dinosaurs, the Hell Creek site was a river valley. The river fed into an inland sea that connected the Arctic Ocean to a prehistoric Gulf of Mexico. After the asteroid struck, seismic waves from a magnitude 10 to 11 earthquake rippled through this sea, according to the study authors.

This caused not a tsunami but what's known as seiche waves, the back-and-forth sloshes sometimes seen in miniature in a bathtub. These can be symptoms of very distant tremors — such as the seiche waves that churned in Norwegian fjords in 2011 after the giant Tohoku earthquake near Japan.

Seiche waves from the inland sea reached 30 feet, drowning the river valley in a pulse of water, gravel and sand. The rain of rocks and glass followed. The tektites dug "small funnels in the sediment laid down by the seiche," Smit said, "so you know for sure they are coming down when the waves are still running upriver."

This is preservation, in other words, of a fresh hell.

2019 © The Washington Post

This article was originally published by The Washington Post.

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https://www.sciencealert.com/catastrophic-new-details-from-the-day-the-dinosaurs-died-uncovered-in-fossils

2019-03-30 10:26:54Z
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