The theory of evolution involving episodic terrestrial catastrophism predicts that the Oort cloud is disturbed by close encounters with massive nebulae. Each disturbance generates bombardment pulses of a few million years duration, the pulse frequencies being determined by the Sun's passage through the spiral arms and central plane of the Galaxy where nebulae concentrate. The structure within a pulse is shown here to be dominated by a series of 'spikes' of 01-0.1 Myr duration separated by .1-1. 0 Myr, each caused by the arrival in circumterrestrial space of the largest comets followed by their disintegration into short-lived Apollo asteroids. The iridium-bearing layers at the Cretaceous-Tertiary and Eocene-Oligocene boundaries are probably not simple impact signatures therefore but are evidence of passages through the complex and dusty interplanetary environment temporarily created by these disintegrations. Evidence is presented that a bombardment pulse was induced 3-5 Myr ago and that a 'spike' in the form of debris from a Chiron-like progenitor of Encke's comet has dominated the terrestrial environment for the last 0.02 Myr: a devolatilized core of substantial dimensions (10-30 km) may still exist. Among the predicted consequences are 14C modulations, climatic variations including the last major glaciation and observable zodiacal light phenomena. The fact that a single dominant body is involved also provides a natural explanation for the common Ni/Ir ratio now observed in Tunguska spherules (1908 AD) and cosmic dust concentrations in Late Pleistocene polar ice (16000-12000Bc). The non-Solar System proportions of such elements as Sn, Sb and Ag, moreover, are consistent with the expected interstellar origin of this particular progenitor comet. © Royal Astronomical Society • Provided by the NASA Astrophysics Data System.