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タイトルOrdovician impacts at sea in Baltoscandia
本文(外部サイト)http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19930000971
著者(英)Lindstroem, M.; Bruun, A.; Floden, T.; Puura, V.
著者所属(英)Stockholm Univ.
発行日1992-01-01
言語eng
内容記述Northern Europe has an assemblage of Ordovician probable impacts that is exceptional because the structures involved are relatively old yet well preserved because they formed at sea and because they formed within a restricted geological time in a relatively small area. The Tvaren, Kardla, and Lockne structures might not be strictly contemporaneous but all formed near the beginning of the Caradoc Age (about 460 Ma), whereas the Granby structure is about 20 Ma older. The range of diameters is from about 2 km (Tvaren, Granby) to 8 km (Lockne). The stratigraphic succession formed on impact at sea, as uniformly documented by these structures, begins with a breccia lens consisting of basement rocks that are intensely crushed. Owing to expulsion of sea water by the impact, this breccia formed under essentially dry conditions. Later on this breccia was in part hydrothermally altered. It is overlain by backsurge turbidite that formed from fragments of local sedimentary bedrock and crystalline basement when the sea water returned to the crater site. Either the turbidite is simply a Bouma sequence (although quite thick - as much as over 50 m) from very coarse rubble to mud, or it is more complex. After deposition of the backsurge turbidite, or turbidite complex, the craters still remained as 150-200-m-deep holes in the sea bed. Together with the presence of relatively shallow water over the rim wall, this situation created predictable hydrologic conditions for extended histories of sedimentation and biological development at the crater as well as within it. The presence of a concentration of craters within a limited area of well-preserved and accessible Ordovician deposits raises a question about the Ordovician, especially its middle portion, as potentially an age of relatively intense impact activity even in wider areas. In this connection it may be apposite to mention that the only fossil stony meteorites so far recorded in rocks are from the late Early and the Middle Ordovician.
NASA分類GEOPHYSICS
レポートNO93N10159
権利No Copyright
URIhttps://repository.exst.jaxa.jp/dspace/handle/a-is/125867


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