Science, Vol.291, No.5510, 1952-1955, 2001
A short duration of the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary event: Evidence from extraterrestrial helium-3
Analyses of marine carbonates through the interval 63.9 to 65.4 million years ago indicate a near-constant flux of extraterrestrial helium-3, a tracer of the accretion rate of interplanetary dust to Earth. This observation indicates that the bolide associated with the Cretaceous-Tertiary (K-T) extinction event was not accompanied by enhanced solar system dustiness and so could not have been a member of a comet shower. The use of helium-3 as a constant-flux proxy of sedimentation rate implies deposition of the K-T boundary clay in (10 +/- 2) x 10(3) years, precluding the possibility of a Long hiatus at the boundary and requiring extremely rapid faunal turnover.