{
"$type": "site.standard.document",
"bskyPostRef": {
"cid": "bafyreieqktwgj7czfa6vpx4bg5tcts2kcckhi6ooze3lzgl2xl4aesp7ny",
"uri": "at://did:plc:xc32dedgv3ceunwz2nrseso4/app.bsky.feed.post/3mmk5j6oo22n2"
},
"path": "/x/09d1eb30f21ebf7e?ref=rss",
"publishedAt": "2026-05-23T18:50:31.000Z",
"site": "https://upstract.com",
"textContent": "The site is called Tanis, in the Hell Creek Formation of southwestern North Dakota. In 2019, a team led by Robert DePalma described it as a rare snapshot of the first minutes to hours after the Chicxulub asteroid impact 66 million years ago. The most arresting detail was not a dinosaur skeleton.…",
"title": "A fossil site in North Dakota appears to have captured the day the dinosaur-killing asteroid struck Earth, right down to tiny glass beads from the impact lodged in the gills of fish that died within hours"
}