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May 21st, 2010 at 9:14 am

Australian Scientists Find Timor Sea Meteorite Crater

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Timor sea

 

Australian scientists have discovered a crater deep beneath the Timor Sea made during a heavy meteor storm which may have altered the Earth’s climate, the lead researcher said Thursday.

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Australian National University archaeologist Andrew Glikson said seismic activity led experts to the Mount Ashmore 1B site, and a study of fragments showed a large meteorite hit just before the Earth’s temperatures plunged…

“The identification of microstructural and chemical features in drill fragments taken from the Mount Ashmore drill hole revealed evidence of a significant impact,” Glikson said, adding it was at least 50 kilometres (31 miles) wide and about 35 million years old.

A meteorite 100 kilometres wide hit Siberia at the same time, along with an 85 km one in Chesapeake Bay, off the US coast of Virginia, followed by a large field of molten rock fragments over northeast America, he said.

“This defined a major impact cluster across the planet,” said Glikson.

Glikson said the findings, published in the latest issue of the Australian Journal of Earth Sciences, could suggest a link between the impacts and a sharp fall in global temperatures which preceded the formation of the Antarctic ice sheet.

Image credit: MODIS – NASA’s Aqua satellite

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