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Many of the planet’s largest mass extinction events are associated with voluminous flood basalt provinces. Flood basalts are not common occurrences on the planet, as they tend to occur once every 10-30 million years. In a future video, I will be exploring the link between asteroid impacts and a select group of these flood basalts.

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GrizzJam

Yes the antipode of the Chicxulub crater corresponds to the Deccan traps. It is also theorized, and highly debated, that the Siberian Traps is the Antipode for the Wilkes land crater (300km) in Antarctica that's buried under 2km of ice. This impactor would have dwarfed the Chicxulub impact and the lava erupted out of the Siberian Traps was order of magnitudes bigger in terms of flood basalt volume (7 million sq km) compared to the Deccan Traps (1.5 million sq km). I've been convinced of this for years and I'm grateful that GeologyHub has come to the same conclusion. He posted this recent video on 4/24/2023 that goes into deeper detail: **EDIT**: Can't seem to insert links to his video. Here's the URL in text: https://youtu.be/rSO1haG2LPI <iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/rSO1haG2LPI" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen=""></iframe>

Anonymous

Does it have something to do with antipodal points? Was India on the opposite side of the planet as Chicxulub at the time?

Anonymous

I believe it was at the antipode of Chixulub 75my ago, but I'll retrace my conversation about it and get back when I find it. There are additional potential examples on several other bodies in the solar system including our moon, Mars, Mercury. Possibly Europa, Io and Enceladus as well but I was told that and have no source as yet. I'm also not sure that we can extrapolate that water would behave exactly like molten rock, it is different in important ways like density, and dissolved gas holding ability etc.