Morokweng impact structure
Template:Short description Template:Use South African English Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox terrestrial impact site The Morokweng impact structure is an impact structure buried beneath the Kalahari Desert near the town of Morokweng in South Africa's North West province, close to the border with Botswana.<ref name=EIDBMorokweng>Template:Cite Earth Impact DB</ref>
DescriptionEdit
Estimates of the diameter of the structure vary widely with some studies suggesting a smaller size of Template:Convert in diameter while others suggests a much larger size of around Template:Convert or more. Its age is estimated to be 146.06 ± 0.16 million years, placing it within the Tithonian stage of the Late Jurassic, several million years before the Jurassic–Cretaceous boundary.<ref name="KennyOthers2021a">Kenny, G.G., Harrigan, C.O., Schmitz, M.D., Crowley, J.L., Wall, C.J., Andreoli, M.A., Gibson, R.L. and Maier, W.D., 2021. Timescales of impact melt sheet crystallization and the precise age of the Morokweng impact structure, South Africa. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 567, no. 117013, 13 p.</ref><ref name="SchmiederdOthers2020a">Schmieder, M. and Kring, D.A., 2020. Earth's impact events through geologic time: a list of recommended ages for terrestrial impact structures and deposits. Astrobiology, 20(1), pp.91-141.</ref><ref>Andreoli, M. A. G., et al. "The 144 Ma Morokweng impact crater, South Africa: geophysical and borehole evidence for a~ 240 km structure." 10th SAGA Bienniak Technical Meeting and Exhibition. 2007.</ref> Discovered in 1994, it is not exposed at the surface, but has been mapped by magnetic and gravimetric surveys. Core samples have shown it to have been formed by the impact of an L chondrite asteroid estimated to have been Template:Convert in diameter.<ref name="McdonaldOthers2001a">Mcdonald, I., Andreoli, M.A.G., Hart, R.J. and Tredoux, M., 2001. Platinum-group elements in the Morokweng impact structure, South Africa: Evidence for the impact of a large ordinary chondrite projectile at the Jurassic-Cretaceous boundary. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 65(2), pp.299-309.</ref>
In May, 2006, a group of scientists drilling into the site announced the discovery of a Template:Convert fragment of the original asteroid at a depth of Template:Convert below the surface, along with several much smaller pieces a few millimetres across at other depths. This discovery was unexpected, since previous drillings on large impact structures had not produced such fragments, and it was thought that the asteroid had been almost entirely vaporised.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Some of the fragments can be seen in the Antenna Wing of London's Science Museum.
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