chicxulub impact crater
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2021 ◽  
Vol 575 ◽  
pp. 117201
Author(s):  
Axel Wittmann ◽  
Aaron J. Cavosie ◽  
Nicholas E. Timms ◽  
Ludovic Ferrière ◽  
Auriol Rae ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Tobias Salge ◽  
Roald Tagle ◽  
Ralf-Thomas Schmitt ◽  
Lutz Hecht

ABSTRACT A combined petrographic and chemical study of ejecta particles from the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary sequence of El Guayal, Tabasco, Mexico (520 km SW of Chicxulub crater), was carried out to assess their formation conditions and genetic relation during the impact process. The reaction of silicate ejecta particles with hot volatiles during atmospheric transport may have induced alteration processes, e.g., silicification and cementation, observed in the ejecta deposits. The various microstructures of calcite ejecta particles are interpreted to reflect different thermal histories at postshock conditions. Spherulitic calcite particles may represent carbonate melts that were quenched during ejection. A recrystallized microstructure may indicate short, intense thermal stress. Various aggregates document particle-particle interactions and intermixing of components from lower silicate and upper sedimentary target lithologies. Aggregates of recrystallized calcite with silicate melt indicate the consolidation of a hot suevitic component with sediments at ≳750 °C. Accretionary lapilli formed in a turbulent, steam-condensing environment at ~100 °C by aggregation of solid, ash-sized particles. Concentric zones with smaller grain sizes of accreted particles indicate a recurring exchange with a hotter environment. Our results suggest that during partial ejecta plume collapse, hot silicate compo nents were mixed with the fine fraction of local surface-derived sediments, the latter of which were displaced by the preceding ejecta curtain. These processes sustained a hot, gas-driven, lateral basal transport that was accompanied by a turbulent plume at a higher level. The exothermic back-reaction of CaO from decomposed carbonates and sulfates with CO2 to form CaCO3 may have been responsible for a prolonged release of thermal energy at a late stage of plume evolution.


Eos ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 102 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alka Tripathy-Lang

Scientists discovered magmatic remnants of a volcanic arc by dating granitic rocks of the middle crust excavated by, and hidden within, the Chicxulub impact crater.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tobias Salge ◽  
et al.

Transmitted light and back-scattered electron (BSE) micrographs of silicate melt-coated calcite aggregates and silicate melt particles, high-resolution energy-dispersive spectrometry elemental map, high-resolution BSE mosaic of accretionary lapillus, X-ray fluorescence analyses of bulk rock and accretionary lapilli, electron microprobe analyses of silicate melt particles, and modal composition calculations.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tobias Salge ◽  
et al.

Transmitted light and back-scattered electron (BSE) micrographs of silicate melt-coated calcite aggregates and silicate melt particles, high-resolution energy-dispersive spectrometry elemental map, high-resolution BSE mosaic of accretionary lapillus, X-ray fluorescence analyses of bulk rock and accretionary lapilli, electron microprobe analyses of silicate melt particles, and modal composition calculations.


Geology ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiawei Zhao ◽  
Long Xiao ◽  
Zhiyong Xiao ◽  
Joanna V. Morgan ◽  
Gordon R. Osinski ◽  
...  

Large impact structures with peak rings are common landforms across the solar system, and their formation has implications for both the interior structure and thermal evolution of planetary bodies. Numerical modeling and structural studies have been used to simulate and ground truth peak-ring formative mechanisms, but the shock metamorphic record of minerals within these structures remains to be ascertained. We investigated impact-related microstructures and high-pressure phases in zircon from melt-bearing breccias, impact melt rock, and granitoid basement from the Chicxulub peak ring (Yucatán Peninsula, Mexico), sampled by the International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP)/International Continental Drilling Project (IODP-ICDP) Expedition 364 Hole M0077A. Zircon grains exhibit shock features such as reidite, zircon twins, and granular zircon including “former reidite in granular neoblastic” (FRIGN) zircon. These features record an initial high-pressure shock wave (>30 GPa), subsequent relaxation during the passage of the rarefaction wave, and a final heating and annealing stage. Our observed grain-scale deformation history agrees well with the stress fields predicted by the dynamic collapse model, as the central uplift collapsed downward-then-outward to form the peak ring. The occurrence of reidite in a large impact basin on Earth represents the first such discovery, preserved due to its separation from impact melt and rapid cooling by the resurging ocean. The coexistence of reidite and FRIGN zircon within the impact melt–bearing breccias indicates that cooling by seawater was heterogeneous. Our results provide valuable information on when different shock microstructures form and how they are modified according to their position in the impact structure, and this study further improves on the use of shock barometry as a diagnostic tool in understanding the cratering process.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiawei Zhao ◽  
Long Xiao ◽  
et al.

Additional details on the methods (Item S1), summary of EBSD mapping results (Table S1), shock effects in zircon from different depths (Table S2), and zircon data from different depths (Item S2).<br>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiawei Zhao ◽  
Long Xiao ◽  
et al.

Additional details on the methods (Item S1), summary of EBSD mapping results (Table S1), shock effects in zircon from different depths (Table S2), and zircon data from different depths (Item S2).<br>


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