Alamo impact crater: New study could double its size
Carbonate rock deposits found within the mountain ranges of south-central Nevada, USA, record evidence of a catastrophic impact event known as the Alamo impact. This event occurred roughly 382 million years ago when the ancient seafloor was struck and a submarine crater was formed. The crater was filled-in with fragmented rock, and later with more typical ocean deposits, as the energy from the impact lessened and the environment returned to normal.
By studying the distribution and features of the post-impact ocean deposits and fragmented rock that filled the crater, Andrew J. Retzler of Idaho State University and colleagues present a new map characterizing the size and shape of the Alamo crater.
Their results indicate that only about half of the Alamo impact crater and its related deposits are now exposed within the region, and they estimate its total diameter to be between 111 and 150 km. This is more than double previous estimates and, if correct, places the Alamo crater as one of the largest marine impacts in the last 550 million years, conservatively larger than the well-studied Chesapeake Bay impact crater (about 35 million years old) on the eastern shore of North America.
Story Source:
The above story is based on materials provided by Geological Society of America. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
Journal Reference:
- A. J. Retzler, L. Tapanila, J. R. Steenberg, C. J. Johnson, R. A. Myers. Post-impact depositional environments as a proxy for crater morphology, Late Devonian Alamo impact, Nevada. Geosphere, 2015; DOI: 10.1130/GES00964.1
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