Particle.news
Download on the App Store

New Mexico Fossils Show Dinosaurs Thriving Right Before Asteroid Impact

High‑precision argon–paleomagnetic dating pins the Naashoibito fossils to within about 340,000 years of the Chicxulub event.

Overview

  • Researchers dated the Naashoibito Member in northwestern New Mexico to roughly 66.4–66.0 million years ago using argon isotope analyses and magnetic polarity data.
  • The site preserves a diverse latest‑Cretaceous fauna that includes the giant sauropod Alamosaurus, Tyrannosaurus, horned dinosaurs and duck‑billed species.
  • Comparisons with the contemporaneous Hell Creek Formation show a clear north–south split in dinosaur communities across western North America, with sauropods absent in the north.
  • The results, published in Science, strengthen evidence that non‑avian dinosaurs in western North America were not in long‑term decline and were abruptly wiped out by the impact.
  • Independent experts welcome the precise dates but stress that conclusions come from a single region and that more well‑dated sites are needed to assess broader continental and global patterns.