Scientists have suggested that dark matter might be the main culprit in mass extinction events.
Recently it was proposed that mass extinctions, destructive events
responsible for wiping out a large portion of the Earth's species every
30 million years or so, could be the result of our solar system passing
through clouds of dust and gas on the galactic plane.
Now however
it turns out that dark matter, the mysterious theoretical substance
thought to make up most of the matter in the universe, might also be
responsible.
Scientists propose that as the solar system passes
through the galactic plane, dark matter, like the dust and gas, may
perturb the orbits of distant comets and send them hurtling towards us.
At
the same time however, dark matter particles may also be having a
direct impact on the Earth's core, raising its temperature and producing
a series of cataclysmic volcanic events.
"One of those sources
of environmental disruption might be tolerable," said geophysicist
Dennis Kent. "But together they might pack a one-two punch that is too
much for many ecosystems to bear."
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