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Cosmic collision in the Rocky Mountains

Geologists discover the biggest and oldest field of craters on Earth, created 280 million years ago

Freiburg, Sep 05, 2018

Cosmic collision in the Rocky Mountains

One of the craters in the strewn field - the red line shows the crater outline. Photo: Thomas Kenkmann

When small asteroids with a diameter of a few meters hit the Earth's atmosphere, they are slowed down and broken up by friction.  When the meteor is made of solid iron, each of the pieces can tear a crater in the Earth's surface. That leaves a strewn field of craters, each up to 100 meters across. Freiburg geology professor Thomas Kenkmann, working with colleagues in the United States, has discovered a 280 million year old meteorite strewnfield in the deposits of the Rocky Mountains of the western USA. It is the oldest and biggest known strewn field of craters on Earth. The team has published its study in the journal Scientific Reports.

Up to now, only six such crater strewn fields were known on Earth, all of them geologically recent and limited to distribution of one or two kilometers. The fossil field of meteor craters in the Rocky Mountains is at least seven and a half kilometers big and consists of more than 40 craters. But it may be bigger, with further craters as yet undetected in the layers of rock. “We are probably only looking at a small part of the whole crater field,” says Kenkmann. 280 million years ago the meteorites struck a flat, sandy coastline. The sand particles were compressed to such an extent that the shock created quartz crystals which can still be found under the microscope today. The craters were well preserved because they were covered by a layer of clay shortly after their formation. Researchers are now investigating what influence this cosmic collision had on the environment at the time.

Thomas Kenkmann has been Professor of General Geology at the University of Freiburg since 2010. He received the Barringer Medal in 2018 for his experimental studies and field work in the area of meteorite impacts. It is the highest international award in impact cratering.

 

Publication:
Kenkmann, Thomas, Sundell, Kent. A. and Cook, Douglas: “Evidence for a large Paleozoic Impact Crater Strewn Field in the Rocky Mountains”, Scientific Reports. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-31655-4

 

Contact:
Professor Dr. Thomas Kenkmann
Institut für Geo- und Umweltnaturwissenschaften
University of Freiburg
Phone: 0761/230-6495
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