[meteorite-list] New Mexico Craters
From: Dennis Cox <dragon-hunter_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Sat, 15 Jan 2011 11:49:11 -0800 Message-ID: <SNT135-ds917568794F29FC8836D898FF20_at_phx.gbl> Hi Abe, and List, For those interested, the website Abe mentioned is mine. It's at: http://craterhunter.wordpress.com/ I would be extremely interested in what you find at the crater sties in southeast New Mexico, and West Texas. Their numbers may seem to be extreme. But only from a 19th century uniformitarian-assumptive viewpoint that assumes that catastrophic impact events don't happen anymore. Or that, a typical extinction level, catastrophic impact event should consist of a single large bolide. And not a large cluster of smaller fragments. But look up in the sky, and take note of the kinds objects we typically see in the Taurid Complex, in short period, Earth-crossing, orbits. The Deep Impact mission to comet TEMPEL 1 showed the head of that comet to have the consistency of a dirty snow bank. It also showed that the object is a geologically active body. Comet HOLMES is unstable, and prone to violent outbursts. Images of fragmented comets LINEAR , and Scwassmann-Wachmann 3, both daughters of the Taurid Complex, make it abundantly clear that total, explosive, fragmentation of a comet from the Taurids can occur spontaneously at any time. And it can happen before it even gets close to a planet. So, in fact, a large cluster of smaller fragments is a far more likely catastrophic impact scenario than a single large bolide. Please read Paleolithic extinctions, and the Taurid Complex, by W. M Napier http://dl.dropbox.com/u/2268163/Paleolithic%20extinctions.pdf Professor Napier points out that the fragmentation of comets is now recognized as a common path to their destruction. He also states that, during the breakup of the Taurid progenitor, the Earth intersecting with the debris of that giant comet's breakup, and producing a mass extinction level catastrophe, is a reasonably probable event. He puts the the estimate at something like 1.1 billion tons of cometary debris impacting over the course of about an hour. The inventory of objects in the Taurid complex is data that's as empirical as anything you can dig up with a shovel, and a magnet. So, in fact, the pristine footprints of a very large, extinction level, super-cluster impact event of smaller fragments should be expected to be found somewhere in North America. The fragment sizes would have included stuff all the way down to dust grains. So it would be logical to predict that airburst phenomena played a very significant role. See: IMPACT MELT FORMATION BY LOW-ALTITUDE AIRBURST PROCESSES, EVIDENCE FROM SMALL TERRESTRIAL CRATERS AND NUMERICAL MODELING. H. E. Newsom1, and M. B. E. Boslough http://dl.dropbox.com/u/2268163/IMPACT%20MELT%20FORMATION%20BY%20LOW-ALTITUDE%20AIRBURST%20PROCESSES%2C.pdf There may be little, or no, shocked grains. But there should still be significant ET chemistry in any blast effected materials from the event. Would you be willing to send a few small rock specimens to Horton Newsom, at UNM's Meteoritics Lab.? Deepest regards to all, Dennis Cox Received on Sat 15 Jan 2011 02:49:11 PM PST |
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