For many years, a peculiar spike of platinum discovered deep within Greenland’s ice has fueled speculation about a devastating comet or asteroid impact approximately 12,800 years ago. This hypothetical event was often linked to the Younger Dryas, a period characterized by a sudden and severe return to glacial conditions. However, recent scientific investigations are now pointing towards a considerably less dramatic, though still potent, explanation: widespread volcanic eruptions.
Researchers have determined that the platinum’s chemical signature does not align with extraterrestrial debris. More importantly, the platinum signal appeared decades *after* the Younger Dryas cooling began, effectively ruling out a cosmic impact as the initial trigger for this ancient climate shift. This new understanding sheds light on a long-standing environmental enigma, redirecting focus to terrestrial geological processes as the likely cause.

