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Featured researches published by Reuben S. Harris.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Evidence for an extraterrestrial impact 12,900 years ago that contributed to the megafaunal extinctions and the Younger Dryas cooling

R. B. Firestone; Allen West; James P. Kennett; Luann Becker; Theodore E. Bunch; Zsolt Révay; Peter H. Schultz; T. Belgya; Douglas J. Kennett; Jon M. Erlandson; O. J. Dickenson; Reuben S. Harris; J. B. Kloosterman; P. Lechler; Paul Andrew Mayewski; J. Montgomery; Robert J. Poreda; Thomas H. Darrah; S. S. Que Hee; A. R. Smith; August Stich; W. Topping; James H. Wittke; Wendy S. Wolbach

A carbon-rich black layer, dating to ≈12.9 ka, has been previously identified at ≈50 Clovis-age sites across North America and appears contemporaneous with the abrupt onset of Younger Dryas (YD) cooling. The in situ bones of extinct Pleistocene megafauna, along with Clovis tool assemblages, occur below this black layer but not within or above it. Causes for the extinctions, YD cooling, and termination of Clovis culture have long been controversial. In this paper, we provide evidence for an extraterrestrial (ET) impact event at ≅12.9 ka, which we hypothesize caused abrupt environmental changes that contributed to YD cooling, major ecological reorganization, broad-scale extinctions, and rapid human behavioral shifts at the end of the Clovis Period. Clovis-age sites in North American are overlain by a thin, discrete layer with varying peak abundances of (i) magnetic grains with iridium, (ii) magnetic microspherules, (iii) charcoal, (iv) soot, (v) carbon spherules, (vi) glass-like carbon containing nanodiamonds, and (vii) fullerenes with ET helium, all of which are evidence for an ET impact and associated biomass burning at ≈12.9 ka. This layer also extends throughout at least 15 Carolina Bays, which are unique, elliptical depressions, oriented to the northwest across the Atlantic Coastal Plain. We propose that one or more large, low-density ET objects exploded over northern North America, partially destabilizing the Laurentide Ice Sheet and triggering YD cooling. The shock wave, thermal pulse, and event-related environmental effects (e.g., extensive biomass burning and food limitations) contributed to end-Pleistocene megafaunal extinctions and adaptive shifts among PaleoAmericans in North America.


Meteoritics & Planetary Science | 2009

A meteorite crater on Earth formed on September 15, 2007: The Carancas hypervelocity impact

Gonzalo Tancredi; J. Ishitsuka; Peter H. Schultz; Reuben S. Harris; Peter Brown; Doug Revelle; K. Antier; A. Le Pichon; D. Rosales; E. Vidal; M. E. Varela; L. Sánchez; S. Benavente; J. Bojorquez; D. Cabezas; A. Dalmau


Archive | 2007

La Dulce Crater: Evidence for a 2.8 km Impact Structure in the Eastern Pampas of Argentina

Reuben S. Harris; Peter H. Schultz; Mayra Aguilar Zarate


Archive | 2005

Evidence for Shocked Feldspars and Ballen Quartz in 450,000 Year Old Argentine Impact Melt Breccias

Reuben S. Harris; Peter H. Schultz; Theodore E. Bunch


Archive | 2005

Accessory Phases in Argentine Impact Breccias: Implications for Shock History, Emplacement Dynamics, Vapor Composition and Target Lithologies

Reuben S. Harris; Peter H. Schultz; Theodore E. Bunch


Archive | 2009

The Argentine Impact Record: Implications for Episodes of Increased Flux during the Last 10 Myr

Reuben S. Harris; Peter H. Schultz


Archive | 2011

The Potential of Impact Melts as a Lunar Water Reservoir

Reuben S. Harris; Peter H. Schultz


Archive | 2009

Microscopic Fragments of an Angrite-like Asteroid in 5.28 Ma Impact Melt Breccias from Bahía Blanca, Argentina

Reuben S. Harris; Peter H. Schultz


Archive | 2008

Petrology of Ejecta from the Caranacas (Peru) Crater: Insights into the Dynamics of an

Reuben S. Harris; Peter H. Schultz; Gonzalo Tancredi; Jose K. Ishitsuka


Archive | 2007

Melt Spherules from Peter's Pond, a Carolina Bay, South Carolina

James H. Wittke; Theodore E. Bunch; Alfred P. West; Reuben S. Harris

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Gonzalo Tancredi

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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A. R. Smith

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Allen West

University of California

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Doug Revelle

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Douglas J. Kennett

Pennsylvania State University

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J. Montgomery

Eastern New Mexico University

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