4.5 • 10.1K Ratings
🗓️ 24 August 2021
⏱️ 26 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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0:00.0 | What sparked my interest in space was just dreaming about the stars. |
0:10.5 | This is Adriana O'Campo, she's a NASA scientist and back when she was a kid in Argentina, |
0:16.2 | she'd grab her dog and head to the roof of her house. |
0:19.1 | You know, we would go every evening that we had a clear sky to the rooftop and look at |
0:25.5 | the stars and I used to ask myself, what were those points of light? |
0:31.3 | What were they, what were they, what were they people like us out there? |
0:35.9 | That dream brought her to NASA and when she became a scientist, Adriana had her own |
0:40.5 | brush with one of those little points of light, not a star, but an asteroid. |
0:45.3 | In the 1980s, a research team was pushing a theory that was extremely controversial |
0:49.4 | at the time. |
0:50.8 | They thought an impact from outer space wiped out the dinosaurs. |
0:54.5 | And the challenge was when 1980 they came up with their publication, they didn't have |
1:00.7 | the location of the impact crater. |
1:03.3 | The scientists had found evidence in Earth's rock layer that they interpreted as a massive |
1:07.4 | impact, but they couldn't find a massive crater to go with it. |
1:11.1 | Their theory needed a smoking gun. |
1:13.4 | Back then, Adriana happened to be studying impact craters. |
1:17.2 | You know, so every circle seemed like a potential impact crater and it was just embedded |
1:21.9 | in my brain. |
1:23.4 | So with impacts on her mind, Adriana saw another scientist present satellite imagery at a conference. |
1:28.5 | It was totally unrelated to the dinosaur thing. |
1:31.4 | The images showed Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula. |
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