Vast asteroid crater found in Timor Sea

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The crater's discovery may answer questions about a period of significant global cooling 35 million years ago.

EVIDENCE OF A MASSIVE crater, at least 50 km across, has been discovered under the Timor Sea and may help scientists explain a rapid cooling of the planet 35 million years ago.

The new findings, announced today and published in the Australian Journal of Earth Sciences, suggest that the impact could have contributed towards the formation of the Antarctic ice sheet.

When Dariuz Jablonski, an oil exploration geologist with Finder Exploration, was conducting seismic surveys in the Timor Sea north of Broome in Western Australia, he found what he suspected to be the remains of large crater site. Dariuz asked Dr Andrew Glikson of the Australian National University in Canberra to help investigate.

Crater diameter 100 km

Andrew, a specialist in extraterrestrial impacts, conducted tests on rock specimens from the sea floor. He found structural features which suggested great heats and pressures and he concluded that the area was the raised “dome” of a crater produced by an asteroid collision 35 million years ago.

"The identification of microstructural and chemical features in drill fragments taken from the... drill hole revealed evidence of a significant impact," he says.

The minimum size of the dome, which "represents elastic rebound doming of the Earth crust triggered by the impact" is 50 km across, but the full size of the crater could be significantly larger, he told Australian Geographic. "It would be possibly 100 km.”

From the probable diameter of the crater, Andrew estimates that the asteroid which struck the Timor Sea was between 5 and 10 km in size.

Correlation with global cooling

This impact coincided with a time of heavy asteroid bombardment globally. Several other craters have been documented from a similar time, including one off the Western Australian coast measuring 120 km in diameter. Another asteroid impact structure in Siberia is 100 km in size.

Andrew believes that collisions such as this may have played a role in the rapid decline in global temperatures. He says that the onslaught of numerous asteroids shifted the Earth's plates to create a rift between South America and Antarctica known as the Drake Passage, which still exists today.  

“It allowed the circum-Antarctic ocean current, a cold current, to be established — this allowed the Antarctic ice sheets to form,” he says. These ice sheets, along with the newly established circular current around Antarctica, forced cooler water into the world’s ocean and may have resulted in a well documented cooling of the planet.
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Comments 29

  • great article Report

     
  • Did the drilling reveal presence of iridium or shocked quartz ??? Report

     
  • Graham.
    Please read the article again,Paying more attention to the facts.
    The minimum size of the dome, which "represents elastic rebound doming of the Earth crust triggered by the impact" is 50 km across, but the full size of the crater could be significantly larger, he told Australian Geographic. "It would be possibly 100 km.”
    From the probable diameter of the crater, Andrew estimates that the asteroid which struck the Timor Sea was between 5 and 10 km in size Report

     
  • in any size or shape it is mind bogles that nature can and does show us she is in charge.
    keep up with all the news guys and gals im rapped Report

     
  • Cool - maybe this is what wiped out the unobtanium. Too bad we didn't have Bruce Willis back then - he'll save us along with Captains Jake Sully and Jack Sparrow. Report

     
  • ahh the benefits of underwater oil drilling and exploration... what could go wrong?? Report

     
  • The article is wrong the crater in Siberia (Popagai) is 100 km the asteroid that created the crater is estimated to be 13.6 kilometer.

    Graham - It is not about getting the physics right, it is about getting the facts rights.

    David - Finish reading the article before posting.

    Aidan - is correct. Report

     
  • Another impact structure in Siberia was created by an asteroid 100 km in size.
    Report

     
  • Some of you posters are pompous asses. Saying things like "please read the article again" and "please get your facts right" is no way to talk to people. There are nicer ways of conversing with your fellow human beings. We all make mistakes once in a while. Report

     
  • Are there any rough coordinates? I just happen to enjoy looking these things up on maps. Report

     
  • You should all read....

    "
    From the probable diameter of the crater, Andrew estimates that the asteroid which struck the Timor Sea was between 5 and 10 km in size.


    Read more: http://www.australiangeographic.com.au/journal/va..." Report

     
  • What impact structure would that be? Report

     
  • this would have been more useful with a lat log of the site so w ecould look at it with google maps and see the underwater crater. and not some random crap artists rendition of an asteroid. Report

     
  • Aidan, you don't get it anymore than Graham did. 'Impact structures' are the craters left behind, not the impactor. A 5-10km rock would produce a crater around 100km in diameter. Report

     
  • "Another impact structure in Siberia was created by an asteroid 100 km in size."

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Popigai_crater

    Read your comments to yourselves before posting. Report

     
  • I thought only large sport utility vehicles were the reason behind global cooling 35 million years ago... Report

     
  • Some of you posters are pompous asses. Saying things like "please read the article again" and "please get your facts right" is no way to talk to people. There are nicer ways of conversing with your fellow human beings. We all make mistakes once in a while. Report

     
  • Luqman, surely there are nicer ways of telling people how to debate than by calling then "pompous asses". This is no way to talk to people. Report

     


  • Oliver Sparrow

    22 May 2010

    So right on the Eocene Oligocene boundary?


    No a million year before the Eocene Oligocene boundry Report

     


  • TomK

    22 May 2010

    Are there any rough coordinates? I just happen to enjoy looking these things up on maps.

    Impact craters in google earth. http://impacts.rajmon.cz/ Report

     
  • Aidan - please read the article again, paying more attention.

    That's "impact structure" not asteroid.

    A 62 mi (100km) asteroid hitting the Earth would kill 90-100% of life. Like the one that ended the reign of the dinosaurs (~ a dozen km in size). It would be more than a giga-megaton bomb (~60 times the combined world atomic arsenal). It would likely burn off the atmosphere of the planet for one thing. Report

     
  • OK so 65mya one asteroid kills all of the dinosaurs and other life. Wipes everything out. 35mya 3 asteroids doesn't do this. Maybe the dinosaurs weren't wiped out by an asteroid. And why so many hits 35mya? I'll bet you there was a magnetic reversal 250mya, 65mya and 35mya. Maybe it's the reversals that's causing the damage. There's a book on this by Robert Felix. Google it. It answers a lot of questions. Report

     
  • The article does not in fact say -impact structure in Siberia was created by an asteroid 100 km - it only says - impact structure in Siberia is 100 km - i.e. the structure, not the asteroid. What emerges from this is that we are now all very clear that the asteroid sizes are around 10 km, and that asteroids 10 times bigger would have had a different - catastrophic - effect. Report

     
  • Hard Hat anyone? Report

     
  • looks like they changed the article to correct the ambiguous wording from earlier.

    but i do not see an editors note marking the change.

    i think we should be outraged at this. Report

     
  • Oh I'm outraged

    No wait, I dont care Report

     
  • I find articles like this laughable when all I have ever used to find impact stuctures is good old Google Earth. A 100 Mile structure is small fries compared to what I have discovered eg:- Whittenoom Gorge Australia. 400 miles accross. Alabama Slamma (4deg21min58.90N 86deg17min50.80W) both earth changing hits but there are bigger. Then you should look at the Himalayas and then Taklamakan Desert. Axis shifting stuff hey. Gaz. Report

     
  • I find articles like this laughable when all I have ever used to find impact stuctures is good old Google Earth. A 100 Mile structure is small fries compared to what I have discovered eg. Whittenoom Gorge Australia. 400 miles accross. Alabama Slamma (4deg21min58 90N 86deg17min50 80W) both earth changing hits but there are bigger. Then you should look at the Himalayas and then Taklamakan Desert. Axis shifting stuff hey. Gaz. Report

     
  • Forgot to mention a little underwater structure of Chatham Island 15 miles accross. 44deg11min58.20N 176deg36min36.20W Report

     

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