[meteorite-list] The so-called "impactite bed"
From: Paul <bristolia_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Sun, 26 Aug 2007 07:39:13 -0700 (PDT) Message-ID: <279201.75212.qm_at_web36211.mail.mud.yahoo.com> Mr. Grondine wrote: ?Yes. Here you go: http://www.nsf.gov/discoveries/disc_summ.jsp?cntn_id=109768&org=NSF&from=news drtanuki <drtanuki at yahoo.com> wrote: ?http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f1GCgOI3B1o The black impactite layer is pretty amazing ? I never expected it to be that dense or clearly obvious to the naked eye - my guess is that it extends throughout other sandstone formations in the region ?? What is seen there is ***not*** a layer of impactite. The ?black mat,? as archaeologist call this layer, is organic-rich sediment, which was deposited in a low-energy cienega (stream or creek bog) environment. "Black mats" have been known to archaeologists for decades. What these black mats represent, along with wet- meadow soils and pond deposits that include diatomite and marls, are periods of higher water tables and increased ground water discharge. They are not all of the same age. Haynes (2003) stated: "Younger Dryas (YD) age "black mats" (YDBM), while variable, represent moister conditions than before or after deposition. Higher water tables, some perched, are indicated by Wet meadow soils, algal mats, and pond sediments Including marls and diatomites, some of which are white. Geochronological study of over 50 localities from Arizona to Canada reveal that YDBMs contain the earliest post-Clovis archaeological evidence and overlie the last Rancholabrean faunas. Upland or lowland YDBMs occur sometimes as facies Or catenas. Regional YD paleosols include the Brady Of Nebraska and the Leonard of the Dakotas. On uplands these are darker and thicker in swales and may reflect perched groundwater or poor drainage. In lowlands they occur deeply buried beneath floodplains; in some colluvial settings multiple black bands are separated by lighter colored slope wash. Some YDBMs are related to springfed meadows and ponds formed during increased-discharge periods." and Huckleberry et al. (2004) stated: "After ca. 11,000 14C yr B.P., sandy and finer alluvial muds commonly contain a dark organic zone or "black mat." These black mats are related to elevated water tables and increased spring activity and cluster in age at 9,500 to 10,500 14C yr B.P. (Quade et al., 1998). Quade et al. (1998) suggest these black mats and associated spring-fed channels formed in response to moister conditions during the Younger Dryas and preserve the last episode of increased spring discharge before substantial drying occurred in the early Holocene." Also, other "black mats" can be found in sediments both post- dating and predating the Clovis Culture all over the United States. For example, in the Lake King basin in Trans-Pecos Texas, black mats have been dated at 17,200, 19,000, 22,600, and 24,700 radiocarbon years BP. Quade et al. (1998) decribes several "black mats", which have been dated as being much younger than Clovis, i.e. 1450 , 2320, 6670, 7920, and 7230 BP. In Figure 11, they show a picture of a "modern black mat marginal to a small spring-fed channel below Indian Springs Ranch in Steptoe Valley, northeast Nevada". Black mats are unique neither to Clovis Sites nor times. All the black mats indicates is that they occupying locations adjacent to spring-fed wet meadows and channels during periods of high ground water table and discharge. All they do is indicate that dramatic climate change occurred during the Younger Dryas. Of course, that is well known and the significant question is what caused it. The black layers, which are seen in photographs are **not** composed of impactite. These black mats, which occur at some Paleo-Indian sites are only hypothesized to contain microscopic impactites. It is quite impossible to see such impactites in any photographs. the see the alleged impactites, a person has to conduct a detailed microscopic analysis of the material. When I worked at the Lubbock Lake Site in Lubbock Texas, I actually excavated bison bones and artifacts from the ?black mats?, which occur at that site. If only I had known the controversy, which they would cause, I would have copies of the slide, which I took before giving them to the Lubbock Lake Site Museum. Given all of the fuss about these black mats, I should contact my archaeologists friends to get some samples to look at for myself. References Cited Haynes, C. V. Jr, 2003, Younger Dryas "Black Mats" and other stratigraphic manifestations of climate change in North America. XVI INQUA congress; Shaping the Earth; a Quaternary perspective. Congress of the International Union for Quaternary Research, 2003, vol. 16, pp. 191. [gsa.confex.com] Huckleberry, G., C. Beck, G. T. Jones, A. Holmes, M. Cannon S. Livingston, and J. M. Broughton, 2001, Terminal Pleistocene/ Early Holocene Environmental Change at the Sunshine Locality, North-Central Nevada, U.S.A. Quaternary Research. vol. 55, no. 3, pp. 303-312. Quade, J., R. M. Forester, W. L. Pratt, and C. Carter, 1998, Black mats, spring-fed streams, and lateglacial-age recharge in the southern Great Basin. Quaternary Research. vol. 49, pp. 129-148. Other discussion of paleoenvironmental significance of ?Black Mats? can be found in: Mehringer, P. J., Jr., and C. V. Haynes, Jr., 1965, The Pollen Evidence for the Environment of Early Man and Extinct Mammals at the Lehner Mammoth Site, Southeastern Arizona American Antiquity. vol. 31, no. 1, pp. 17-23. Waters, M. R., 1991, The Geoarchaeology of Gullies and Arroyos in Southern Arizona. Journal of Field Archaeology. vol. 18, no. 2, pp. 141-159. Waters, M. R., 2000, Alluvial stratigraphy and geoarchaeology in the American Southwest. Geoarchaeology. Vol. 15, no. 6, pp 537-577. Waters, M. R., and D. D. Kuehn, 1996, The Geoarchaeology of Place: The Effect of Geological Processes on the Preservation and Interpretation of the Archaeological Record American Antiquity. vol. 61, no. 3, pp. 483-497. Yours, Paul ____________________________________________________________________________________ Building a website is a piece of cake. Yahoo! Small Business gives you all the tools to get online. http://smallbusiness.yahoo.com/webhosting Received on Sun 26 Aug 2007 10:39:13 AM PDT |
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