Odd Impact Crater found in the North Sea 27
An anonymous reader writes "Just noticed this on MSNBC. It seems they discovered an impact crater in the North Sea that doesn't look like anything else seen on Earth. Supposedly it looks like something usually seen on moons of Jupiter."
So what's the difference between what's seen on... (Score:1)
Re:So what's the difference between what's seen on (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:So what's the difference between what's seen on (Score:2, Informative)
I think the biggest difference is... (Score:2)
For an example of the difference here, try dropping a decent-sized rock on a beach. The crater it creates has only the one ridge (if any). So, how do you set up those multiple rings... especially since it appears that they have approximately the same amplitudes.
I could be wrong, but that seems to be the biggest difference... and my semi-uneducated guess is that it is most likely due to how close the impacted material is to a fluid (i.e. compare solid rock and sand), since fluids let deformation waves like these to propogate easier than solids. But, that's just a guess.
Multiple impacts? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Multiple impacts? (Score:2, Informative)
Inorder to gut concentric rings like that with multiple impacts I would assume that the impacts would need to be a couple of hours apart, because the initial impact would still be hot, so it would just make the crater bigger.
Since Earth is rotating (15deg/hour) the asteroids would need to come from different directions, and the chances of that would be very high like, say 1 in 2^276709, so I would say that it was probably not multiple impacts.
Did that make sense?
AP Story (Score:3, Informative)
No, that's the hard way... (Score:4, Insightful)
See, if the dinosaurs had been smarter, they wouldn't be extinct. Q.E.D.
That's called a caldera. (Score:2, Informative)
Interesting (Score:2)
Large asteroid belt collision with comet / two very very large asteroids?
Many possible situations could lead to this... just interesting to me I guess...
One In A Billion (Score:3, Interesting)
Stewart said that if Silverpit was created 60 million years ago, there wouldn't be any cause to link the two impacts. "On the other hand, if it came out at 65 million years ago, we would have the possibility that Silverpit was in fact a fragment of Chicxulub [...]"
IANAG(eologist). It seems to me, though, that if Silverpit was a fragment of Chicxulub, it would have to have hit the surface of the earth within a matter of hours as the part that hit near the Yucatan. They speak in the article of pinning the time frame down to 65 million years ago, and I'm assuming give or take half a million. With the information I have at hand, Chicxulub and Silverpit could have been up to a million years apart. Do you know what a million years is, in hours? About 8.76 billion. That's a pretty big margin of error! I don't think we should get our hopes up about the multi-dinosaur-killing-meteorites thing despite all its appeal, unless there is some other more substantial reason to believe these two meteorites had anything to do with one another. After all, a lot of meteorites hit the earth every million years.
Re:One In A Billion (Score:2)
Re:One In A Billion (Score:2)
After all, a lot of meteorites hit the earth every million years.
Not this big they don't! A 12 mile crater! But I guess that it could be a statistical anomaly.
Re:One In A Billion (Score:1)
Re:One In A Billion (Score:2)
The answer:
Many geologists belive that there was a cataclysmic event on Venus the completely regenerated all of the land at roughly the same time, a couple of hundred million years ago. Maybe a huge asteroid impact, or maybe a natural vulcanic phenomenon.
I'm to lazy to do a google search for you, but it's neat, huh?
Article lacks details (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Article lacks details (Score:2)
This article on the bbc news site [bbc.co.uk] maybe explains a little more.
Quoting one of their paragraphs :
This suggests that similar craters are found only in non-rocky places, such as Jupiters icy moons Callisto and Europa.
What *is* odd about this is... (Score:4, Informative)
Concentric circles would be more common on worlds with little atmosphere to slow the object. Since we know that Earth at that time had a (relatively) thick atmosphere, it just makes the puzzle all the more interesting. What would be interesting to find out is the metal composition at the center of the impact site -- that could tell us a great deal about what hit. Probably iron, but it *could* be something as heavy as uranium.
Re:What *is* odd about this is... (Score:2, Informative)
the (at least partial) disintegration of such meteorites might help explain the iridium layer. perhaps the earth passed through a field of iridium bearing objects during that time. who knows. it will be interesting to see what they dig up.
Re:What *is* odd about this is... (Score:2)
> "straight-in" impact
No, since the concetric circles around the crater are created by shockwaves from the impact wich propagate with the same speed in all directions through the soil - independent of the direction of the impacting object.
Almost all impact craters are circular (Score:3, Informative)
Craters are not always circular as they may have been created from impacts which hit the surface at oblique angles forming elliptical craters however as impact craters are formed by very high velocity impacts which act essentially like an explosion rather than a distortion of the surface so unless the impact is very shallow and ploughs along the surface the craters will tend to be circular.
Here is another interesting quote from the same page that may explain the concentric rings:
If the crater is larger and the same order of magnitude as the thickness of the lithosphere then shock waves will penetrate the more plastic athenosphere resulting in the formation of multiringed basins.
Possible explanation - New Scientist (Score:1)
Map URL (Score:3, Informative)