[meteorite-list] World's Biggest Impact Crater Discovered
From: Sterling K. Webb <sterling_k_webb_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Fri, 16 Oct 2009 17:59:50 -0500 Message-ID: <2BEA682EF256403F99703EAA5FF60C18_at_ATARIENGINE2> Dear Geo and List, The Indian Deccan Traps basalt-flood vulcanism began before dinosaurs were extinct, continued through the extinction event, and for a few million years afterward. The region of the vast lava flows has some major sites of fossilized dinosaur eggs, not after the eruptions, but during and in-between them, thus demonstrating rather conclusively that several million years of the Traps (the second biggest flood-basalt region on the planet) did not kill off the dinosaurs, even the ones that lived there. The individual layers of the Traps have been well-dated; the so-called crater has not been dated at all. I say so- called crater because it is regarded with great skepticism by many including me (who is as pro-impact as you'll find hereabouts). All they have done is look at the shape. I do not find that shape convincing -- the "central peak" is not in the center but over near the rim (impossible!) and the rim walls don't look like rim walls to me. They know they need actual evidence. I quote: "The team hopes to go India later this year to examine rocks drill[ed] from the center of the putative crater for... shattered and melted target rocks,... breccias, shocked quartz, and an iridium anomaly..." But... but... how could it have circular walls (or half a circular wall)? Well, 65.3 million years ago, India wasn't IN India. India was a big island off southern Africa, just east of Madagascar! (50 million years before that, it was part of (or attached to) Antarctica. India was on a long, slow sea voyage to the north. So, about 30 million years ago, it smacked into Asia and pushed the Himalayas up and lifted the low-lying Tibet Plateau into the sky. Anyway, we don't know where the exact plate boundaries of the cruising Indian Plate were and don't know if the "crater" traveled north with it. Or, it could simply be that the "crater" is nothing but some wrinkled terrain that India pushed into and bent... hard. We WON'T know without a lot of drilling and sampling and dating over vast stretches of ocean and gravimetric surveys and a buncha stuff that costs millions. Until then, we have press releases which are cheap but might inspire a little money... I'm not contributing any of my few pennies, but I hope somebody does. The crater could have come north with India or it could have been in the way when India arrived or it may date to 253 million years and be a piece of the Permian crater plucked off Antarctica and drug off by the Indian Plate or it could be nothing much at all. It is worth noting that it was almost exactly on the other side, 180 degrees, from Chicxulub at the time. It may be what planetologists call "chaotic terrain" and which is formed by the shock wave of an impact directly on the other side of a planet. (There's an example of that on Mercury, a suspected example on Mars, and so forth.) It's more likely that the Traps flow of lave was unleashed by the Chicxulub impact. Of course, on a planet with Earth's apparently unique tectonics, there's lots of chaotic terrain from all kinds of causes. Sterling K. Webb -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----- Original Message ----- From: <GeoZay at aol.com> To: <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com> Sent: Friday, October 16, 2009 2:42 PM Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] World's Biggest Impact Crater Discovered > It says the object that made the crater would be about 25 miles in > diameter...that seems to be way too large to end up with life > recovering like it > did. It also suggested that it could have been the cause of the > dinosaur > extinction and then suggested it might have caused the Volcanic > Deccan traps? > Weren't these two events a couple hundred million years apart? > GeoZay > > ______________________________________________ > http://www.meteoritecentral.com > Meteorite-list mailing list > Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com > http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list Received on Fri 16 Oct 2009 06:59:50 PM PDT |
StumbleUpon del.icio.us Yahoo MyWeb |