Meteor Crater

Meteor Crater

Also known as Barringer Crater
Impact crater/structure
Confidence confirmed[1]
Diameter 1.186 kilometers (0.737 mi)
Age 50,000 years
Exposed Yes
Drilled Yes
Bolide type iron meteorite
Location
Country United States
State Arizona
Meteor Crater
Location of Meteor Crater in Arizona
Access Interstate 40

Meteor Crater is a meteorite impact crater located approximately 43 miles (69 km) east of Flagstaff, near Winslow in the northern Arizona desert of the United States. Because the US Department of the Interior Division of Names commonly recognizes names of natural features derived from the nearest post office, the feature acquired the name of "Meteor Crater" from the nearby post office named Meteor.[2] The site was formerly known as the Canyon Diablo Crater, and fragments of the meteorite are officially called the Canyon Diablo Meteorite. Scientists refer to the crater as Barringer Crater in honor of Daniel Barringer who was first to suggest that it was produced by meteorite impact.[3] The crater is privately owned by the Barringer family through their Barringer Crater Company,[4] which proclaims it to be "the first proven, best-preserved meteorite crater on earth."[5]

Despite its importance as a geological site, the crater is not protected as a national monument, a status that would require federal ownership. It was designated a National Natural Landmark in November 1967.[6]

Meteor Crater lies at an elevation of about 1,740 m (5,709 ft) above sea level. It is about 1,200 m (4,000 ft) in diameter, some 170 m deep (570 ft), and is surrounded by a rim that rises 45 m (150 ft) above the surrounding plains. The center of the crater is filled with 210–240 m (700–800 ft) of rubble lying above crater bedrock.[1] One of the interesting features of the crater is its squared-off outline, believed to be caused by pre-existing regional jointing (cracks) in the strata at the impact site.[7]

Contents

Formation of the crater

The crater was created about 50,000 years ago[8][9] during the Pleistocene epoch when the local climate on the Colorado Plateau was much cooler and damper. At the time, the area was an open grassland dotted with woodlands inhabited by woolly mammoths and giant ground sloths. It was probably not inhabited by humans; the earliest confirmed record of human habitation in the Americas dates from long after this impact.

The object that excavated the crater was a nickel-iron meteorite about 50 meters (54 yards) across, which impacted the plain at a speed of several kilometers per second. Impact energy has been estimated at about 10 megatons. The speed of the impact has been a subject of some debate. Modeling initially suggested that the meteorite struck at a speed of up to 20 kilometers per second (45,000 mph), but more recent research suggests the impact was substantially slower, at 12.8 kilometers per second (28,600 mph). It is believed that about half of the impactor's 300,000 metric tons (330,000 short tons) bulk was vaporized during its descent, before it hit the ground.[10]

The impactor itself was mostly vaporized; very little of the meteorite remained within the pit that it had excavated.[11]

Discovery and investigation

The crater came to the attention of scientists following its discovery by European settlers in the 19th century. Dubbed the Canyon Diablo crater – from Canyon Diablo, Arizona, the closest community to the crater in the late 19th century, 12 miles (19 km) northwest of the crater, but now a ghost town – it had initially been ascribed to the actions of a volcano. This was not an unreasonable assumption, as the San Francisco volcanic field lies only about 40 miles (64 km) to the west.

Grove Karl Gilbert

In 1891 Grove Karl Gilbert, chief geologist for the U.S. Geological Survey, investigated the crater and concluded that it was the result of a volcanic steam explosion. Gilbert had assumed that if it were an impact crater then the volume of the crater, as well as meteoritic material, should be present on the rim. Gilbert also assumed a large portion of the meteorite should be buried in the crater and that this would generate a large magnetic anomaly. Gilbert's calculations showed that the volume of the crater and the debris on the rim were roughly equivalent, so that the mass of the hypothetical impactor was missing, nor were there any magnetic anomalies. Gilbert argued that the meteorite fragments found on the rim were coincidental. Gilbert would publicize these conclusions in a series of lectures in 1895.[12] In 1892 Gilbert would be among the first to propose that the moon's craters were caused by impact rather than volcanism.[13]

Daniel Barringer

In 1903, mining engineer and businessman Daniel M. Barringer suggested that the crater had been produced by the impact of a large iron-metallic meteorite. Barringer's company, the Standard Iron Company, staked a mining claim to the land [14] and received a patent signed by Theodore Roosevelt[15] for 640 acres (2.6 km2) around the center of the crater in 1903.[16] The claim was divided into four quadrants coming from the center clockwise from northwest named Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn. In 1906 Roosevelt authorized the establishment of a newly named Meteor, Arizona post office (the closest post office before was 30 miles (48 km) away in Winslow, Arizona).

Standard Iron Company conducted research on the crater's origins between 1903 and 1905. It concluded that the crater had indeed been caused by an impact. Barringer and his partner, the mathematician and physicist Benjamin Chew Tilghman, documented evidence for the impact theory in papers presented to the U.S. Geological Survey in 1906 and published in the Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia.

Barringer's arguments were met with skepticism, as there was a reluctance at the time to consider the role of meteorites in terrestrial geology. He persisted and sought to bolster his theory by locating the remains of the meteorite. At the time of first discovery by Europeans, the surrounding plains were covered with about 30 tons of large oxidized iron meteorite fragments. This led Barringer to believe that the bulk of the impactor could still be found under the crater floor. Impact physics was poorly understood at the time and Barringer was unaware that most of the meteorite vaporized on impact. He spent 27 years trying to locate a large deposit of meteoric iron, and drilled to a depth of 419 m (1,376 ft), but no significant deposit was ever found.

Barringer, who in 1894 was one of the investors who made $15 million in the Commonwealth silver mine in Pearce, Arizona in Cochise County, Arizona, had ambitious plans for the iron ore.[17] He estimated from the size of the crater that the meteorite had a mass of 100 million tons.[12] The current estimate of 300,000 tons for the impactor is only three-tenths of one percent of Barringer's estimate. Iron ore of the type found at the crater was valued at the time at $125/ton so Barringer believed he was searching for lode worth more than a billion 1903 dollars.[17]

Despite Barringer's findings and other excavations in the early 20th century,[18] geologists' skepticism continued until the 1950s when planetary science gained in maturity and understanding of cratering processes increased. Professor Herman Leroy Fairchild, an early promoter of impact cratering, argued Barringer's case in an article in Science in 1930.[10][19]

Eugene M. Shoemaker

It was not until 1960 that later research by Eugene Merle Shoemaker would confirm Barringer's hypothesis. The key discovery was the presence in the crater of the minerals coesite and stishovite, rare forms of silica found only where quartz-bearing rocks have been severely shocked by an instantaneous overpressure. It cannot be created by volcanic action; the only known mechanism of creating it is through an impact event (or artificially through a nuclear explosion).[20][21]

Shoemaker's discovery is considered the first definitive proof of an extraterrestrial impact on the Earth's surface. Since then, numerous impact craters have been identified around the world, though Meteor Crater remains one of the most visually impressive due to its size, young age and lack of vegetative cover.

Geology

The impact created an inverted topography so that the layers immediately exterior to the rim are stacked in opposite order in which they normally occur; the impact overturned and inverted the layers to a distance of one to two kilometers outward from the crater's edge.[22] Specifically, climbing the rim of the crater from outside, one finds:

Panoramic from the lower viewing deck

Meteor Crater today

Meteor Crater is today a popular tourist attraction privately owned by the Barringer family, with an admission fee charged to see the crater. The Meteor Crater Visitor Center on the north rim features interactive exhibits and displays about meteorites and asteroids, space, the solar system and comets. It features the American Astronaut Wall of Fame, and such artifacts on display as an Apollo boilerplate command module (BP-29), a 1,406 pound meteorite found in the area, and meteorite specimens from Meteor Crater that can be touched. Formerly known as the Museum of Astrogeology, the Visitor Center includes a movie theater, a gift shop, and observation areas with views inside the rim of the crater. Guided tours of the rim are offered daily.

Recent history

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b "Barringer". Earth Impact Database. University of New Brunswick. http://www.passc.net/EarthImpactDatabase/barringer.html. Retrieved 2008-12-30. 
  2. ^ J. P. Barringer's acceptance speech. Meteoritics, volume 28, page 9 (1993). Retrieved on the SAO/NASA Astrophysics Data System
  3. ^ Grieve, R.A.F. (1990) Impact Cratering on the Earth, Scientific American 262(4), 66-73.
  4. ^ "Barringer Meteorite Crater * Meteorites Craters and Impacts". Barringercrater.com. http://www.barringercrater.com/about/. Retrieved 2010-03-16. 
  5. ^ "Meteor Crater". Meteor Crater. http://www.meteorcrater.com/index.php. Retrieved 2010-03-16. 
  6. ^ NPS NNL Summary
  7. ^ Shoemaker, Eugene M.; and Susan W. Kieffer (1979). Guidebook to the Geology of Meteor Crater, Arizona. Tempe, Arizona: Center for Meteorite Studies, Arizona State University. p. 45. 
  8. ^ Roddy, D. J.; and E. M. Shoemaker (1995). "Meteor Crater (Barringer Meteorite Crater), Arizona: summary of impact conditions". Meteoritics 30 (5): 567. 
  9. ^ Nishiizumi, K.; et al. (1991). "In situ 10Be-26Al exposure ages at Meteor Crater, Arizona". Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 55 (9): 2699–2703. doi:10.1016/0016-7037(91)90388-L. 
  10. ^ a b Melosh HJ, Collins GS (2005). "Planetary science: Meteor Crater formed by low-velocity impact". Nature 434 (7030): 157. doi:10.1038/434157a. PMID 15758988. 
  11. ^ Schaber, Gerald G. "A Chronology of Activities from Conception through the End of Project Apollo (1960–1973)", 2005, U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2005-1190. (PDF)
  12. ^ a b The Science: What is the Barringer Meteorite Crater?
  13. ^ "NASA – Moon". Nasa.gov. http://www.nasa.gov/worldbook/moon_worldbook.html. Retrieved 2010-03-16. 
  14. ^ Oldroyd, David Roger (2002). The earth inside and out: some major contributions to geology.... Geological Society. pp. 30. 
  15. ^ Howarth, Richard John; Gerald Joseph Home McCall (2006). The history of meteoritics and key meteorite collections. Geological Society. pp. 61. 
  16. ^ Barringer, B. (December 1964). "Daniel Moreau Barringer (1860-1929) and His Crater (the beginning of the Crater Branch of Meteoritics)". Meteoritics (Meteoritical Society) 2 (3): 186. Bibcode 1964Metic...2..183B. 
  17. ^ a b A Grand Obsession – Daniel Moreau and His Crater by Nancy Southgate and Felicity Barringer – Barringer Crater Co (2002)
  18. ^ "Progress in Wide Search for Meteor". June 25, 1928. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=OtMlAAAAIBAJ&sjid=F_gFAAAAIBAJ&pg=6076,7026926. Retrieved 2010-07-13. 
  19. ^ Fairchild HL (1930). "Nature and fate of the Meteor Crater bolide". Science 72 (1871): 463–466. doi:10.1126/science.72.1871.463. PMID 17800007. 
  20. ^ Eugene M. Shoemaker, Meteor Crater, Arizona, Geological Society of America Centennial Field Guide—Rocky Mountain Section, 1987
  21. ^ Oldroyd, David Roger (2002). The earth inside and out: some major contributions to geology.... Geological Society. pp. 28-32. 
  22. ^ Basic Stratigraphy of Barringer Meteor Crater. Retrieved April 12, 2009.
  23. ^ Apollo Lunar Training, Days of Archives exhibit, Northern Arizona University
  24. ^ ASN Wikibase Occurrence # 69872, Aviation Safety Network
  25. ^ Plane Crash At Meteor Crater Revisited, Sept. 1, 2008 Meteorite-times.com

External links