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Monturaqui

Monturaqui is an impact crater in Chile. It lies south of the Salar de Atacama and was formed 663,000 ± 90,000 years ago by the impact of an IAB meteorite. It is 350 m × 370 m (1,150 ft × 1,210 ft) wide and 34 m (112 ft) deep and contains a salt pan. Only a few remnants of the meteorite that formed the crater have been collected, with most of the rocks being of local origin. The crater was discovered in 1962 and identified as an impact crater in 1966.

Monturaqui
Impact crater/structure
Diameter350 m × 370 m (1,150 ft × 1,210 ft)
Depth34 m (112 ft)
Impactor diameter15 m (49 ft)
Age663,000 ± 90,000 years ago
ExposedYes
DrilledNo
Bolide typeGroup 1 octahedrite
Location
Coordinates23°55′39″S 68°15′42″W / 23.92750°S 68.26167°W / -23.92750; -68.26167[1]
CountryChile
StateAntofagasta Region
class=notpageimage|
Location of Monturaqui crater

Human history edit

The crater was first suspected to be an impact crater in 1962,[2] when it was found on aerial images. After geologic research on the site found evidence of the impact event,[3] it was identified as an impact crater in 1966.[4] The crater has not been drilled.[5] Its name is derived from the mountain range where it is located[3] and from the town of Monturaqui 70 km (43 mi). The closest town is Peine, 35 km (22 mi) northeast of the crater.[6]

An old Inka road, which goes from the Pacific Ocean to San Pedro de Atacama and further to Argentina, runs 100–200 m (330–660 ft) from the crater.[7][8] The crater has been deemed by Stanislav Kaniansky and Kristian Molnár to be one of the "most impressive" in the world[9] and has a high scenic and historical value.[10] The Chilean Geological Society has defined it as one of the geosites of Chile,[11] although such a classification has no legal effect[12] and the crater is threatened by erosion caused by vehicles and the over-collection of rocks.[10] In 2017, several Chilean organizations and the community of Peine petitioned the Chilean government to declare the site a historic monument.[13] Monturaqui crater is a tourist attraction in the area.[14]

Geography and geomorphology edit

Monturaqui lies in a remote region of the Atacama Desert[15] south of the Salar de Atacama, in the "precordillera". The city of Antofagasta lies 200 km (120 mi) northwest of the crater.[4] Administratively, the crater is in the Antofagasta Region.[11]

Monturaqui is a nearly circular,[16] well-preserved 350 m × 370 m (1,150 ft × 1,210 ft) wide and 34 m (112 ft) deep impact crater.[4] It has the shape of a bowl[15] and is elongated in northwest–southeast direction.[1] The height of its rim ranges between 16–48 m (52–157 ft)[17] with the southern rim being about 10–15 m (33–49 ft) higher than the northern. Sedimentation in rain-fed ponds has left a 40 m2 (430 sq ft)[18] playa in the crater,[19] which lies in its northeastern quadrant[17] and is surrounded by lake sediments.[20] Bushes grow close to the salt pan deposits and it could be considered a "salt pan oasis".[19] The dry climate (the annual precipitation is less than 1 mm (0.039 in)[7]) means that water in the crater tends to evaporate.[21] A magnetic anomaly is associated with the crater.[22]

It is located at about 3,015 m (9,892 ft) elevation.[4] The terrain in the area consists of Paleozoic granites that are covered by Pliocene ignimbrites,[23] and slopes northward to the Salar de Atacama, thus explaining the tilt of the crater.[7] Dykes cut through the granitic units, and both ignimbrites and granites are faulted.[18] The impact primarily affected the granitic units[24] but both units are apparent in the crater walls and the ignimbrites cover the rim crest.[1]

Impact event edit

The impact has been dated with radiometric dating to have occurred about 663,000 ± 28,000 years ago.[25] Various surface exposure dating techniques yield ages of about 500,000–780,000 years.[1] Since then, erosion has altered the crater by depositing fluvial and mass wasting deposits in it,[26] gullying its sides[19] and by lowering the rim.[15] Originally, the Monturaqui crater was connected with the Campo del Cielo[6] or the Rio Cuarto impact structures in Argentina.[27]

The meteorite probably hit from the northwest[9] at an angle of 41° and was travelling at a velocity of about 15 km/s (9.3 mi/s).[1] Because of the elevation at which it hit the ground, the meteorite had traversed only a little more than half the atmosphere and thus had not lost as much mass as it would have had it hit ground at sea level.[16] The impact heated the ground to temperatures exceeding 1,400 °C (2,550 °F),[28] probably reaching 1,500–1,600 °C (2,730–2,910 °F),[29] and had an energy comparable to that of 2.2 Hiroshima bombs.[30] The formation of the crater disrupted the local drainage network, which redeveloped to run around the crater.[6]

Impactor edit

The impacting body was a metallic asteroid containing iron and nickel.[3] It has been identified as a group I octahedrite[4] and as an IAB meteorite[31] with a size of about 15 m (49 ft).[1]

Impact products edit

The impact has produced rocks such as impact glass,[32] coesite and shocked quartz; some rocks were completely melted during the impact[4] and others were turned to glass. Impact-generated rocks formed mostly from granite and meteorite material.[28] They are mostly found at the east-southeast side of the crater,[18] with lesser amounts on its inside.[33]

Only a few[33] or no fragments of the meteorite have been recovered.[15] Given the proximity of the crater to an old road, this may be due to traders and herdsmen removing meteorite fragments[8] but it may also be due to the metals being oxidized over time.[7] They include rocks called "iron shale",[34] they are magnetic indicating their origin in the meteorite.[8]

The nonoxidized parts consist of cohenite, rabdite, schreibersite and taenite. Other minerals are goethite, lepidocrocite, maghemite, pentlandite and reevesite.[35][36] Metallic spherules occur.[15] Fragments of the Monturaqui meteorite have been collected in the meteorite collection of "Giorgio Abetti" Astronomical Observatory and Museum, San Giovanni in Persiceto, Bologna, Italy.[37]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Peate et al. 2010, p. 1.
  2. ^ Roeschmann & Rada 2000, p. 1.
  3. ^ a b c Staffieri, Stelvio; Coletta, Alessandro; Battagliere, Maria Libera; Virelli, Maria (2019), Flamini, Enrico; Di Martino, Mario; Coletta, Alessandro (eds.), "Monturaqui, Chile", Encyclopedic Atlas of Terrestrial Impact Craters, Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 665–669, doi:10.1007/978-3-030-05451-9_185, ISBN 978-3-030-05449-6, S2CID 239286702, retrieved 2021-06-25
  4. ^ a b c d e f Ugalde, Valenzuela & Milkereit 2007, p. 2153.
  5. ^ Rawal, J. J.; Ramadurai, S. (2007). "The role of Alfven drag in the planetary cratering process". Current Science. 93 (10): 1405. ISSN 0011-3891. JSTOR 24099350.
  6. ^ a b c Sanchez & Cassidy 1966, p. 4895.
  7. ^ a b c d Buchwald 1975, p. 1405.
  8. ^ a b c Sanchez & Cassidy 1966, p. 4893.
  9. ^ a b Kaniansky & Molnár 2015, p. 120.
  10. ^ a b Valenzuela & Benado 2018, p. 110.
  11. ^ a b Martínez, Tomás (2015). (PDF). XIV Congreso Geológico Chileno (in Spanish). p. 423. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 25, 2021.
  12. ^ Valenzuela & Benado 2018, p. 107.
  13. ^ Valenzuela & Benado 2018, p. 111.
  14. ^ "Bienestar humano y manejo sustenable en San Pedro de Atacama - Chile" (PDF). Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (in Spanish). Retrieved 25 June 2021.
  15. ^ a b c d e Crósta et al. 2019, p. 196.
  16. ^ a b Bunch & Cassidy 1972, p. 95.
  17. ^ a b Sanchez & Cassidy 1966, p. 4891.
  18. ^ a b c Ugalde, Valenzuela & Milkereit 2007, p. 2159.
  19. ^ a b c Cockell, Charles S.; Lee, Pascal (August 2002). "The biology of impact craters – a review". Biological Reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society. 77 (3): 297. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.474.7227. doi:10.1017/S146479310100584X. PMID 12227518. S2CID 38544565.
  20. ^ Crósta et al. 2019, p. 197.
  21. ^ Cockell, Charles S.; Lim, Darlene S.S. (2005), Tokano, Tetsuya (ed.), "11 Impact Craters, Water and Microbial Life", Water on Mars and Life, Advances in Astrobiology and Biogeophysics, Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer, p. 269, Bibcode:2005wml..book..261C, doi:10.1007/978-3-540-31538-4_11, ISBN 978-3-540-31538-4, retrieved 2021-06-25
  22. ^ Lamali, A.; Rochette, P.; Merabet, N.; Abtout, A.; Maouche, S.; Gattacceca, J.; Ferrière, L.; Hamoudi, M.; Meziane, E. H.; Ayache, M. (2016). "Geophysical and magneto-structural study of the Maâdna structure (Talemzane, Algeria): Insights on its age and origin". Meteoritics & Planetary Science. 51 (12): 2265. Bibcode:2016M&PS...51.2249L. doi:10.1111/maps.12715. ISSN 1945-5100. S2CID 132557766.
  23. ^ Ugalde, Valenzuela & Milkereit 2007, p. 2157.
  24. ^ Ugalde, Valenzuela & Milkereit 2007, p. 2162.
  25. ^ Ukstins, Ingrid A.; Wartho, Jo-Anne; Cabrol, Nathalie A.; Grin, Edmond A.; van Soest, Matthijs C.; Biren, Marc B.; Hodges, Kip V.; Chong, Guillermo (1 February 2022). "An (U-Th)/He age for the small Monturaqui impact structure, Chile". Quaternary Geochronology. 67: 10. doi:10.1016/j.quageo.2021.101217. ISSN 1871-1014.
  26. ^ Ugalde, Valenzuela & Milkereit 2007, pp. 2158–2159.
  27. ^ Brobst, Donald Albert (1970). Barite: World Production, Reserves, and Future Prospects. U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 24.
  28. ^ a b Bunch & Cassidy 1972, p. 110.
  29. ^ Roeschmann & Rada 2000, p. 3.
  30. ^ Roeschmann & Rada 2000, p. 6.
  31. ^ Kaniansky & Molnár 2015, p. 121.
  32. ^ Schultz, Peter H.; Zárate, Marcelo; Hames, Willis E.; Harris, R. Scott; Bunch, T. E.; Koeberl, Christian; Renne, Paul; Wittke, James (May 2006). "The record of Miocene impacts in the Argentine Pampas". Meteoritics & Planetary Science. 41 (5): 768. Bibcode:2006M&PS...41..749S. doi:10.1111/j.1945-5100.2006.tb00990.x. hdl:11336/81867. S2CID 7590495.
  33. ^ a b Roeschmann & Rada 2000, p. 2.
  34. ^ Buchwald 1975, p. 1406.
  35. ^ Grieve, R. A. F.; Palme, H.; Plant, A. G. (1981-09-01). "Siderophile-rich particles in the melt rocks at the E. Clearwater impact structure, Quebec: Their characteristics and relationship to the impacting body". Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology. 75 (3): 192. Bibcode:1981CoMP...75..187G. doi:10.1007/BF01166759. ISSN 1432-0967. S2CID 129916750.
  36. ^ Bender Koch, C.; Buchwald, V. F. (1994). "Weathering of iron meteorites from Monturaqui, Chile". Meteoritics. 29."
  37. ^ Levi-Donati, G. R. (July 1996). "The meteorite collection of "Giorgio Abetti"* Astronomical Observatory and Museum, San Giovanni in Persiceto, Bologna, Italy: An update of the catalog". Meteoritics & Planetary Science. 31 (S4): 185. Bibcode:1996M&PSA..31..181L. doi:10.1111/j.1945-5100.1996.tb02102.x.

General sources edit

  • Buchwald, Vagn F. (1975), Iron Meteorites Supplement: Guadaloupe County - Monturaqui, University of California Press, retrieved 2021-06-25
  • Bunch, T. E.; Cassidy, William A. (1972). "Petrographic and electron microprobe study of the Monturaqui impactite". Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology. 36 (2): 95–112. Bibcode:1972CoMP...36...95B. doi:10.1007/BF00371181. S2CID 129022135.
  • Crósta, A.P.; Reimold, W.U.; Vasconcelos, M.A.R.; Hauser, N.; Oliveira, G.J.G.; Maziviero, M.V.; Góes, A.M. (May 2019). "Impact cratering: The South American record—Part 2". Geochemistry. 79 (2): 191–220. Bibcode:2019ChEG...79..191C. doi:10.1016/j.chemer.2018.09.002. ISSN 0009-2819. S2CID 133991514.
  • Kaniansky, Stanislav; Molnár, Kristian (2015). A new analysis of Monturaqui Meteorites (PDF). Proceedings of the IMC. Mistelbach.
  • Peate, I. Ukstins; van Soest, M. C.; Wartho, J. A.; Cabrol, N.; Grin, E.; Piatek, J.; Chong, G. (2010). A novel application of (U-Th)/He geochronology to constrain the age of small, young meteorite impact craters: A case study of the Monturaqui crater, Chile (PDF). 41st Lunar and Planetary Science Conference.
  • Roeschmann, C.; Rada, C. (2000). El impacto meteoritico de Monturaqui, Region de Antofagasta, Chile: Productos y procesos. 9th Chilean Geological Congress (in Spanish) – via Academia.edu.
  • Sanchez, Joaquin; Cassidy, William (1966). "A previously undescribed meteorite crater in Chile" (PDF). Journal of Geophysical Research. 71 (20): 4891–4895. Bibcode:1966JGR....71.4891S. doi:10.1029/JZ071i020p04891. ISSN 2156-2202.
  • Ugalde, Hernan; Valenzuela, Millarca; Milkereit, Bernd (2007). "An integrated geophysical and geological study of the Monturaqui impact crater, Chile". Meteoritics & Planetary Science. 42 (12): 2153–2163. Bibcode:2007M&PS...42.2153U. doi:10.1111/j.1945-5100.2007.tb01015.x. ISSN 1945-5100. S2CID 140698217.
  • Valenzuela, Millarca; Benado, José (2018), Acevedo, Rogelio Daniel; Frías, Jesús Martínez (eds.), "Meteorites and Craters Found in Chile: A Bridge to Introduce the First Attempt for Geoheritage Legal Protection in the Country", Geoethics In Latin America, The Latin American Studies Book Series, Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 103–115, doi:10.1007/978-3-319-75373-7_7, ISBN 978-3-319-75373-7, retrieved 2021-06-25

External links edit

  • Cukierski, Daniel Owen (2013-05-01). Textural and compositional analysis of Fe-Ni metallic spherules in impact melt from Monturaqui Crater, Chile (Theses and Dissertations). doi:10.17077/etd.xe5yzbjc.
  • Kloberdanz, Christine Marie (2010). Geochemical analysis of the Monturaqui impact crater, Chile (Diss). University of Iowa.

monturaqui, impact, crater, chile, lies, south, salar, atacama, formed, years, impact, meteorite, wide, deep, contains, salt, only, remnants, meteorite, that, formed, crater, have, been, collected, with, most, rocks, being, local, origin, crater, discovered, 1. Monturaqui is an impact crater in Chile It lies south of the Salar de Atacama and was formed 663 000 90 000 years ago by the impact of an IAB meteorite It is 350 m 370 m 1 150 ft 1 210 ft wide and 34 m 112 ft deep and contains a salt pan Only a few remnants of the meteorite that formed the crater have been collected with most of the rocks being of local origin The crater was discovered in 1962 and identified as an impact crater in 1966 MonturaquiImpact crater structureDiameter350 m 370 m 1 150 ft 1 210 ft Depth34 m 112 ft Impactor diameter15 m 49 ft Age663 000 90 000 years agoExposedYesDrilledNoBolide typeGroup 1 octahedriteLocationCoordinates23 55 39 S 68 15 42 W 23 92750 S 68 26167 W 23 92750 68 26167 1 CountryChileStateAntofagasta Region Monturaqui craterMonturaquiCalamaSan Pedro de AtacamaAntofagastaPeineEscondidaParanal Observatoryclass notpageimage Location of Monturaqui crater Contents 1 Human history 2 Geography and geomorphology 3 Impact event 3 1 Impactor 3 2 Impact products 4 References 4 1 Citations 4 2 General sources 5 External linksHuman history editThe crater was first suspected to be an impact crater in 1962 2 when it was found on aerial images After geologic research on the site found evidence of the impact event 3 it was identified as an impact crater in 1966 4 The crater has not been drilled 5 Its name is derived from the mountain range where it is located 3 and from the town of Monturaqui 70 km 43 mi The closest town is Peine 35 km 22 mi northeast of the crater 6 An old Inka road which goes from the Pacific Ocean to San Pedro de Atacama and further to Argentina runs 100 200 m 330 660 ft from the crater 7 8 The crater has been deemed by Stanislav Kaniansky and Kristian Molnar to be one of the most impressive in the world 9 and has a high scenic and historical value 10 The Chilean Geological Society has defined it as one of the geosites of Chile 11 although such a classification has no legal effect 12 and the crater is threatened by erosion caused by vehicles and the over collection of rocks 10 In 2017 several Chilean organizations and the community of Peine petitioned the Chilean government to declare the site a historic monument 13 Monturaqui crater is a tourist attraction in the area 14 Geography and geomorphology editMonturaqui lies in a remote region of the Atacama Desert 15 south of the Salar de Atacama in the precordillera The city of Antofagasta lies 200 km 120 mi northwest of the crater 4 Administratively the crater is in the Antofagasta Region 11 Monturaqui is a nearly circular 16 well preserved 350 m 370 m 1 150 ft 1 210 ft wide and 34 m 112 ft deep impact crater 4 It has the shape of a bowl 15 and is elongated in northwest southeast direction 1 The height of its rim ranges between 16 48 m 52 157 ft 17 with the southern rim being about 10 15 m 33 49 ft higher than the northern Sedimentation in rain fed ponds has left a 40 m2 430 sq ft 18 playa in the crater 19 which lies in its northeastern quadrant 17 and is surrounded by lake sediments 20 Bushes grow close to the salt pan deposits and it could be considered a salt pan oasis 19 The dry climate the annual precipitation is less than 1 mm 0 039 in 7 means that water in the crater tends to evaporate 21 A magnetic anomaly is associated with the crater 22 It is located at about 3 015 m 9 892 ft elevation 4 The terrain in the area consists of Paleozoic granites that are covered by Pliocene ignimbrites 23 and slopes northward to the Salar de Atacama thus explaining the tilt of the crater 7 Dykes cut through the granitic units and both ignimbrites and granites are faulted 18 The impact primarily affected the granitic units 24 but both units are apparent in the crater walls and the ignimbrites cover the rim crest 1 Impact event editThe impact has been dated with radiometric dating to have occurred about 663 000 28 000 years ago 25 Various surface exposure dating techniques yield ages of about 500 000 780 000 years 1 Since then erosion has altered the crater by depositing fluvial and mass wasting deposits in it 26 gullying its sides 19 and by lowering the rim 15 Originally the Monturaqui crater was connected with the Campo del Cielo 6 or the Rio Cuarto impact structures in Argentina 27 The meteorite probably hit from the northwest 9 at an angle of 41 and was travelling at a velocity of about 15 km s 9 3 mi s 1 Because of the elevation at which it hit the ground the meteorite had traversed only a little more than half the atmosphere and thus had not lost as much mass as it would have had it hit ground at sea level 16 The impact heated the ground to temperatures exceeding 1 400 C 2 550 F 28 probably reaching 1 500 1 600 C 2 730 2 910 F 29 and had an energy comparable to that of 2 2 Hiroshima bombs 30 The formation of the crater disrupted the local drainage network which redeveloped to run around the crater 6 Impactor edit The impacting body was a metallic asteroid containing iron and nickel 3 It has been identified as a group I octahedrite 4 and as an IAB meteorite 31 with a size of about 15 m 49 ft 1 Impact products edit The impact has produced rocks such as impact glass 32 coesite and shocked quartz some rocks were completely melted during the impact 4 and others were turned to glass Impact generated rocks formed mostly from granite and meteorite material 28 They are mostly found at the east southeast side of the crater 18 with lesser amounts on its inside 33 Only a few 33 or no fragments of the meteorite have been recovered 15 Given the proximity of the crater to an old road this may be due to traders and herdsmen removing meteorite fragments 8 but it may also be due to the metals being oxidized over time 7 They include rocks called iron shale 34 they are magnetic indicating their origin in the meteorite 8 The nonoxidized parts consist of cohenite rabdite schreibersite and taenite Other minerals are goethite lepidocrocite maghemite pentlandite and reevesite 35 36 Metallic spherules occur 15 Fragments of the Monturaqui meteorite have been collected in the meteorite collection of Giorgio Abetti Astronomical Observatory and Museum San Giovanni in Persiceto Bologna Italy 37 nbsp nbsp References editCitations edit a b c d e f Peate et al 2010 p 1 Roeschmann amp Rada 2000 p 1 a b c Staffieri Stelvio Coletta Alessandro Battagliere Maria Libera Virelli Maria 2019 Flamini Enrico Di Martino Mario Coletta Alessandro eds Monturaqui Chile Encyclopedic Atlas of Terrestrial Impact Craters Cham Springer International Publishing pp 665 669 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 05451 9 185 ISBN 978 3 030 05449 6 S2CID 239286702 retrieved 2021 06 25 a b c d e f Ugalde Valenzuela amp Milkereit 2007 p 2153 Rawal J J Ramadurai S 2007 The role of Alfven drag in the planetary cratering process Current Science 93 10 1405 ISSN 0011 3891 JSTOR 24099350 a b c Sanchez amp Cassidy 1966 p 4895 a b c d Buchwald 1975 p 1405 a b c Sanchez amp Cassidy 1966 p 4893 a b Kaniansky amp Molnar 2015 p 120 a b Valenzuela amp Benado 2018 p 110 a b Martinez Tomas 2015 Estado actual de reconocimiento y distribucion geografica del Patrimonio Geologico Chileno PDF XIV Congreso Geologico Chileno in Spanish p 423 Archived from the original PDF on June 25 2021 Valenzuela amp Benado 2018 p 107 Valenzuela amp Benado 2018 p 111 Bienestar humano y manejo sustenable en San Pedro de Atacama Chile PDF Millennium Ecosystem Assessment in Spanish Retrieved 25 June 2021 a b c d e Crosta et al 2019 p 196 a b Bunch amp Cassidy 1972 p 95 a b Sanchez amp Cassidy 1966 p 4891 a b c Ugalde Valenzuela amp Milkereit 2007 p 2159 a b c Cockell Charles S Lee Pascal August 2002 The biology of impact craters a review Biological Reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society 77 3 297 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 474 7227 doi 10 1017 S146479310100584X PMID 12227518 S2CID 38544565 Crosta et al 2019 p 197 Cockell Charles S Lim Darlene S S 2005 Tokano Tetsuya ed 11 Impact Craters Water and Microbial Life Water on Mars and Life Advances in Astrobiology and Biogeophysics Berlin Heidelberg Springer p 269 Bibcode 2005wml book 261C doi 10 1007 978 3 540 31538 4 11 ISBN 978 3 540 31538 4 retrieved 2021 06 25 Lamali A Rochette P Merabet N Abtout A Maouche S Gattacceca J Ferriere L Hamoudi M Meziane E H Ayache M 2016 Geophysical and magneto structural study of the Maadna structure Talemzane Algeria Insights on its age and origin Meteoritics amp Planetary Science 51 12 2265 Bibcode 2016M amp PS 51 2249L doi 10 1111 maps 12715 ISSN 1945 5100 S2CID 132557766 Ugalde Valenzuela amp Milkereit 2007 p 2157 Ugalde Valenzuela amp Milkereit 2007 p 2162 Ukstins Ingrid A Wartho Jo Anne Cabrol Nathalie A Grin Edmond A van Soest Matthijs C Biren Marc B Hodges Kip V Chong Guillermo 1 February 2022 An U Th He age for the small Monturaqui impact structure Chile Quaternary Geochronology 67 10 doi 10 1016 j quageo 2021 101217 ISSN 1871 1014 Ugalde Valenzuela amp Milkereit 2007 pp 2158 2159 Brobst Donald Albert 1970 Barite World Production Reserves and Future Prospects U S Government Printing Office p 24 a b Bunch amp Cassidy 1972 p 110 Roeschmann amp Rada 2000 p 3 Roeschmann amp Rada 2000 p 6 Kaniansky amp Molnar 2015 p 121 Schultz Peter H Zarate Marcelo Hames Willis E Harris R Scott Bunch T E Koeberl Christian Renne Paul Wittke James May 2006 The record of Miocene impacts in the Argentine Pampas Meteoritics amp Planetary Science 41 5 768 Bibcode 2006M amp PS 41 749S doi 10 1111 j 1945 5100 2006 tb00990 x hdl 11336 81867 S2CID 7590495 a b Roeschmann amp Rada 2000 p 2 Buchwald 1975 p 1406 Grieve R A F Palme H Plant A G 1981 09 01 Siderophile rich particles in the melt rocks at the E Clearwater impact structure Quebec Their characteristics and relationship to the impacting body Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 75 3 192 Bibcode 1981CoMP 75 187G doi 10 1007 BF01166759 ISSN 1432 0967 S2CID 129916750 Bender Koch C Buchwald V F 1994 Weathering of iron meteorites from Monturaqui Chile Meteoritics 29 Levi Donati G R July 1996 The meteorite collection of Giorgio Abetti Astronomical Observatory and Museum San Giovanni in Persiceto Bologna Italy An update of the catalog Meteoritics amp Planetary Science 31 S4 185 Bibcode 1996M amp PSA 31 181L doi 10 1111 j 1945 5100 1996 tb02102 x General sources edit Buchwald Vagn F 1975 Iron Meteorites Supplement Guadaloupe County Monturaqui University of California Press retrieved 2021 06 25 Bunch T E Cassidy William A 1972 Petrographic and electron microprobe study of the Monturaqui impactite Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 36 2 95 112 Bibcode 1972CoMP 36 95B doi 10 1007 BF00371181 S2CID 129022135 Crosta A P Reimold W U Vasconcelos M A R Hauser N Oliveira G J G Maziviero M V Goes A M May 2019 Impact cratering The South American record Part 2 Geochemistry 79 2 191 220 Bibcode 2019ChEG 79 191C doi 10 1016 j chemer 2018 09 002 ISSN 0009 2819 S2CID 133991514 Kaniansky Stanislav Molnar Kristian 2015 A new analysis of Monturaqui Meteorites PDF Proceedings of the IMC Mistelbach Peate I Ukstins van Soest M C Wartho J A Cabrol N Grin E Piatek J Chong G 2010 A novel application of U Th He geochronology to constrain the age of small young meteorite impact craters A case study of the Monturaqui crater Chile PDF 41st Lunar and Planetary Science Conference Roeschmann C Rada C 2000 El impacto meteoritico de Monturaqui Region de Antofagasta Chile Productos y procesos 9th Chilean Geological Congress in Spanish via Academia edu Sanchez Joaquin Cassidy William 1966 A previously undescribed meteorite crater in Chile PDF Journal of Geophysical Research 71 20 4891 4895 Bibcode 1966JGR 71 4891S doi 10 1029 JZ071i020p04891 ISSN 2156 2202 Ugalde Hernan Valenzuela Millarca Milkereit Bernd 2007 An integrated geophysical and geological study of the Monturaqui impact crater Chile Meteoritics amp Planetary Science 42 12 2153 2163 Bibcode 2007M amp PS 42 2153U doi 10 1111 j 1945 5100 2007 tb01015 x ISSN 1945 5100 S2CID 140698217 Valenzuela Millarca Benado Jose 2018 Acevedo Rogelio Daniel Frias Jesus Martinez eds Meteorites and Craters Found in Chile A Bridge to Introduce the First Attempt for Geoheritage Legal Protection in the Country Geoethics In Latin America The Latin American Studies Book Series Cham Springer International Publishing pp 103 115 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 75373 7 7 ISBN 978 3 319 75373 7 retrieved 2021 06 25External links editCukierski Daniel Owen 2013 05 01 Textural and compositional analysis of Fe Ni metallic spherules in impact melt from Monturaqui Crater Chile Theses and Dissertations doi 10 17077 etd xe5yzbjc Kloberdanz Christine Marie 2010 Geochemical analysis of the Monturaqui impact crater Chile Diss University of Iowa Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Monturaqui amp oldid 1194868494, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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