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Text 1<br/><br/>In 2021, a team led by Amir Siraj hypothesized that the Chicxulub impactor--the object that struck the Yucatan Peninsula sixty-six million years ago, precipitating the mass extinction of the dinosaurs--was likely a member of the class of long-period comets. As evidence, Siraj cited the carbonaceous chondritic composition of samples from the Chicxulub impact crater as well as of samples obtained from long-period comet Wild 2 in 2006.<br/><br/>Text 2<br/><br/>Although long-period comets contain carbonaceous chondrites, asteroids are similarly rich in these materials. Furthermore, some asteroids are rich in iridium, as Natalia Artemieva points out, whereas long-period comets are not. Given the prevalence of iridium at the crater and, more broadly, in geological layers deposited worldwide following the impact, Artemieva argues that an asteroid is a more plausible candidate for the Chicxulub impactor.<br/><br/>Based on the texts, how would Artemieva likely respond to Siraj's hypothesis, as presented in Text 1?