D. Shane Miller
University of Arizona
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014
David J. Meltzer; Vance T. Holliday; Michael D. Cannon; D. Shane Miller
Significance A key element underpinning the controversial hypothesis of a widely destructive extraterrestrial impact at the onset of the Younger Dryas is the claim that 29 sites across four continents yield impact indicators all dated to 12,800 ± 150 years ago. This claim can be rejected: only three of those sites are dated to this window of time. At the remainder, the supposed impact markers are undated or significantly older or younger than 12,800 years ago. Either there were many more impacts than supposed, including one as recently as 5 centuries ago, or, far more likely, these are not extraterrestrial impact markers. According to the Younger Dryas Impact Hypothesis (YDIH), ∼12,800 calendar years before present, North America experienced an extraterrestrial impact that triggered the Younger Dryas and devastated human populations and biotic communities on this continent and elsewhere. This supposed event is reportedly marked by multiple impact indicators, but critics have challenged this evidence, and considerable controversy now surrounds the YDIH. Proponents of the YDIH state that a key test of the hypothesis is whether those indicators are isochronous and securely dated to the Younger Dryas onset. They are not. We have examined the age basis of the supposed Younger Dryas boundary layer at the 29 sites and regions in North and South America, Europe, and the Middle East in which proponents report its occurrence. Several of the sites lack any age control, others have radiometric ages that are chronologically irrelevant, nearly a dozen have ages inferred by statistically and chronologically flawed age–depth interpolations, and in several the ages directly on the supposed impact layer are older or younger than ∼12,800 calendar years ago. Only 3 of the 29 sites fall within the temporal window of the YD onset as defined by YDIH proponents. The YDIH fails the critical chronological test of an isochronous event at the YD onset, which, coupled with the many published concerns about the extraterrestrial origin of the purported impact markers, renders the YDIH unsupported. There is no reason or compelling evidence to accept the claim that a cosmic impact occurred ∼12,800 y ago and caused the Younger Dryas.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008
David G. Anderson; Scott C. Meeks; Albert C. Goodyear; D. Shane Miller
Buchanan et al.s (1) statistical evaluation of radiocarbon dates as a demographic proxy depends on accurate and complete datasets. However, their database is incomplete for the Southeast, where 181 radiocarbon dates from Paleoindian and Early Archaic deposits are now available (2). Only a fraction of these are included in their …
Quaternary Research | 2013
D. Shane Miller; Joseph A. M. Gingerich
Quaternary International | 2011
Jesse Ballenger; Vance T. Holliday; Andrew L. Kowler; William T. Reitze; Mary M. Prasciunas; D. Shane Miller; Jason D. Windingstad
Archive | 2005
David G. Anderson; D. Shane Miller; Stephen Yerka; Michael K. Faught
Archive | 2014
D. Shane Miller; Vance T. Holliday; Jordon Bright
Archive | 2014
Vance T. Holliday; D. Shane Miller
Current Research in the Pleistocene | 2008
D. Shane Miller; Albert C. Goodyear
The 81st Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology | 2017
David G. Anderson; David Echeverry; D. Shane Miller; Stephen Yerka
The 81st Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology | 2016
Kelsey Meer; J. Ryan Young; D. Shane Miller; Albert C. Goodyear