Wednesday, November 16, 2022

The Oldest Crater From A Meteorite Isn't A Crater After All?

The Oldest Crater From A Meteorite Isn't A Crater After All?




One of the best ways to peer back into the history of our solar system is by looking at impact craters on the Earth and Moon. These craters, formed by massive rocks crashing into our planetary bodies, tell a story of how the solar system and planets formed and evolved through time. In general, Earth has very few craters from its earliest days, because plate tectonics and surface processes usually do a really great job of erasing ancient structures. But one crater seems to have stood the test of time, and promises to give us insight into the Earth about three billion years ago. Except it might not actually be a crater after all! On the coast of Western Greenland, near the small town of Maniitsoq, geologists in 2012 announced they had found some bizarre features in the rocks; some were melted, and others pulverized. To figure out what was going on, scientists mapped the different rock types across the entire area and surveyed the local magnetic field to discover what lay beneath the strange features. What they discovered was like nothing else seen on Earth. The rocks are deformed into a large circular bowl on the ground, about 100 kilometers across. And within that area, there are widespread fractures and specific kinds of rock that hint at huge stress in the crust. 




Then include breccias, made when rock is smashed up and then cemented back together, and



amphibolite rock which
 are metamorphic rocks formed under intense heat and pressure. What's more, in the center, there seems to be a massive area of pulverized rock, up to 50 kilometers across. The geologists pieced all of these clues together and concluded that there were no natural geological processes on Earth that could create all of these features. The only reasonable explanation, they said, was that the huge Maniitsoq structure was, in fact, an impact crater. By looking at the age of melted rocks from around the structure, the researchers could even tell when that crater was formed: about three billion years ago. That makes it the oldest known impact crater on Earth, and the only crater known from the so-called Archean period. A crater of this age could shed a lot of light on what Earth was like during this mysterious era, a time that we know very little about. For instance, asteroid impacts, like the one that brought about the dinosaurs demise, are typically associated with massive environmental changes. Perhaps a Maniitsoq impact could have done the same, radically changing the Archean environment just as life was starting out on Earth. But new research from 2021 has thrown a wrench into the works. A team of scientists took a closer look at the Maniitsoq structure, but instead of looking at the rocks on a kilometer scale, they examined them on the micrometer scale. They were looking, specifically, at zircon crystals. These are incredibly resistant and durable minerals that can withstand heat, pressure, erosion, impact a pretty much anything you can throw at them. But they're also like little time capsules, recording what they have been through, within their internal structure. 



For example:


Zircons Rock

Zircons from other, younger impact sites around the world have tiny fractures running through them, evidence of the massive stresses they endured during a collision. So this new research examined more than 5,000 zircon grains collected from around the Maniitsoq structure. But despite careful probing with cutting-edge geochemical and microscopic techniques, researchers found no evidence of impact-induced stress. So the authors concluded that the weird geology near Maniitsoq was not in fact caused by a meteor impact, but was instead the result of a unique time in Earth  evolution. The intense heat, pressure, and fracturing could be linked to a period of massive tectonic and volcanic activity all over the globe, which is also thought to have happened around three billion years ago. At this time, scientists think that the Earth mantle reached incredibly high temperatures, as radioactive decay in the core combined with leftover heat from the planet  formation. All this heat caused magma to be injected upwards into the crust, ballooning it outwards and cooking and deforming the rocks over a period of about 200 million years. Scientists think this process is responsible for growing the first continental crust on Earth. And the Maniitsoq structure might just be a scar left behind from this turbulent time. On the basis of the new zircon research, the Maniitsoq structure is no longer considered an impact crater by the Earth Impact Database. But the structure as original discoverers don't  believe thats the end of the story. Even if the zircons dont show any record of a meteor impact, thereas still no easy way to explain the pulverized rocks at the center of the structure. which is much more than normal geological processes can account for. So thereas still work to do, to get to the bottom of what created the Maniitsoq structure, and just what it meant for our planet. Whether its an impact from above, or injection from below, its nothing like the Earth has seen before, or since. Examining our own planet with innovative new techniques will help us understand it on both the micrometer and kilometer scales. And even if its not an impact, understanding the curious structure better will help us understand what exactly was going on on Earth during periods we know so little about. 


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