In an astounding paleontological discovery, scientists have found direct evidence of animals dying in the hours following the impact that took out 75 per cent of the world's species 66 million years ago in a rock outcrop in North Dakota.

"We're so excited because the deposit that we have actually records a snapshot in time from within the first two hours after impact in very, very precise detail," said Robert DePalma, an adjunct professor of geosciences at Florida Atlantic University and a PhD student at the University of Kansas.

Layers of rock read like a storybook

Sixty-six million years ago, the site in what is now North Dakota was a lush terrestrial river valley, about 3,000 kilometres from where a 10-km wide asteroid or comet would strike the Yucatan penininsula.

Very shortly after the impact occurred, ejecta from the impact site rained down across the continent.

"We have particles of debris from the impact that are encapsulated by the deposit and were essentially dropped there while the deposit was forming," said DePalma.

Tiny ejecta spherules from Chicxulub Impact (Robert DePalma/University of Kansas)

Then a surge of roiling muddy water containing animals, plants and trees, came roaring up this river valley. DePalma said they originally thought was a tsunami wave, but the timing of the arrival of that wave didn't make sense with what they saw in the rocks. A tsunami would have taken much longer to get to North Dakota.

"We actually did calculations and we discovered that the seismic waves from the impact would have affected our study area at just about the right time after impact that we would have gotten that ejected as well," said DePalma.

Instead the wave of water and debris was caused by the massive seismic shocks from the impact.

"So the seismic waves appeared to have caused this massive surge [in water] in a similar way that the surge in Norway was caused by the 2011 Tōhoku Japan earthquake almost 8000 kilometers away."

To cap off the layers from that day is a layer of Iridium-bearing rock — leftover from the vaporized asteroid or comet — that fell back down to Earth.

A really bad day for all living creatures

The rapid sequence of events was fortunate for the scientists because it meant what was left behind was a jumble of species packed that were buried "almost like a sardine can."

"We have some of the most exceptional preservation of anywhere in the Hell Creek formation," said DePalma.

Intertangled mass of fish fossils at North Dakota site. (Robert DePalma/University of Kansas)

"We have fish with relatively three dimensional bodies. We have trees with branches that still have leaves on them. And we have very, very delicate things that normally don't ever get preserved, such as flowers and soft bodied organisms, that are all preserved there. And they're able to give us data about essentially a cross-section of what was alive at that time."

DePalma describes these animals that were likely alive at the time of the impact:

Fish that had material in their gills that was identified as ejecta thrown up by the impact site that rained down into the water.

A mammal burrowing away in a hole.

A dinosaur bone with soft tissue still attached.

This discovery adds more weight to the case that the the mass extinction 66 million years ago was due to the fallout from the impact event.

More to come

DePalma says the findings released so far are just the beginnings of the wealth of material he and his team have found and are studying. He says there will be more news to come in in future scientific papers.

Some of those discoveries to come were outlined in a recent article in the New Yorker.

"As a scientist, it does trouble me that some items of our discovery were revealed before the papers were able to be written on those. So anything mentioned that is valid will have a paper written about it," said DePalma.