Shiva crater

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The Shiva crater is a sea floor structure, thought by some to be an impact crater (astrobleme), located beneath the Indian Ocean west of Mumbai on the west coast of India. It was named by the paleontologist Sankar Chatterjee for Shiva, the Hindu god of destruction and renewal.

According to the impact hypothesis, it formed around 65 million years ago, at about same time as a number of other impact craters and the Cretaceous-Tertiary extinction event (K-T boundary). Although the site has shifted since its formation because of sea floor spreading, it has been suggested that when pieced together the putative crater would have been about 600 km by 450 km across and 12 km deep (and may be just part of a larger crater). It is estimated that a crater of that size would have been made by an asteroid or comet 40 km in diameter.

At the time of the K-T extinction India was located over the Réunion hotspot of the Indian Ocean. Hot material rising from the mantle flooded portions of India with a vast amount of lava, creating a plateau known as the Deccan Traps. The eruptions started a few million years before the K-T extinction and become very abundant at about 65 million years ago. The fact that the supposed Shiva crater lies near the Deccan Traps has been claimed as support for the controversial idea that the eruptions were triggered or accelerated by an impact event.

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Coordinates: 18°40′N, 70°14′E

Cretaceous-Tertiary extinction event
Craters found at the K-T boundary
Boltysh crater Chicxulub Crater
Eagle Butte crater Shiva crater
Silverpit crater Vista Alegre crater
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