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Vredefort impact structure

The Vredefort impact structure is one of the largest verified impact structures on Earth.[1] The crater, which has since been eroded away, has been estimated at 170 kilometres (110 mi)[2] to 300 km (190 mi)[3] across when it was formed. The remaining structure, comprising the deformed underlying bedrock, is located in present-day Free State province of South Africa. It is named after the town of Vredefort, which is near its centre. The structure's central uplift is known as the Vredefort Dome. The impact structure was formed during the Paleoproterozoic Era, 2.023 billion (± 4 million) years ago. It is the second-oldest known impact structure on Earth, after Yarrabubba.

Vredefort impact structure
Vredefort Dome
Vredefort Dome (centre), with the Vaal river running across it; seen from space with the Operational Land Imager on Landsat 8, 27 June 2018
Impact crater/structure
ConfidenceConfirmed
Diameter170–300 km (110–190 mi) (estimated former crater diameter)
Age2,023 ± 4 Ma
Orosirian, Paleoproterozoic
ExposedYes
DrilledYes
Location
Coordinates27°0′0″S 27°30′0″E / 27.00000°S 27.50000°E / -27.00000; 27.50000
CountrySouth Africa
ProvinceFree State
Location of Vredefort impact structure
Official nameVredefort Dome
Includes
  1. Vredefort Dome core area
  2. The stromatolite/basal fault plane site
  3. The chocolate tablet breccia site
  4. The pseudotachylite (quarry) site
CriteriaNatural: (viii)
Reference1162
Inscription2005 (29th Session)
Area30,000 ha (120 sq mi)

In 2005, the Vredefort Dome was added to the list of UNESCO World Heritage Sites for its geologic interest.

Formation and structure edit

 
Map of South Africa showing the location of the Vredefort Dome, the remains of a 2.023-billion-year-old impact structure. The interrupted line circle, 300 km (190 mi) in diameter, marks the extent of the original crater.
 
The view from the top of Aasvoëlkop in the heart of the Vredefort impact structure with the Vaal River and Venterskroon on its right in the background

The asteroid that hit Vredefort is estimated to have been one of the largest ever to strike Earth since the Hadean Eon some four billion years ago, originally thought to have been approximately 10–15 km (6.2–9.3 mi) in diameter.[4] As of 2022, the bolide was estimated at between 20 and 25 kilometres (12 and 16 mi) in diameter and to have impacted with a vertical velocity of 15–25 kilometres per second (34,000–56,000 mph).[3]

The original impact structure is estimated to have had a diameter of at least 170 km (110 mi), with the impact affecting the structure of the surrounding host rock in a circular region around 300 km (190 mi) in diameter.[2] Other estimates have placed the original crater diameter closer to 300 km (190 mi).[3] The landscape has since been eroded to a depth of around 7–11 km (4.3–6.8 mi) since formation, obliterating the original crater. The remaining structure, the "Vredefort Dome", consists of a partial ring of hills 70 km (43 mi) in diameter, and is the remains of the central uplift created by the rebound of rock below the impact site after the collision.[2]

Estimates have placed the structure’s age to be 2.023 billion years (± 4 million years)[5] or 2.019/2.020 billion years (± 2-3 million years) old.[6] which places it in the Orosirian Period of the Paleoproterozoic Era. It is the second oldest universally accepted impact structure on Earth. In comparison, it is about 10% older than the Sudbury Basin impact (at 1.849 billion years) and the Yarrabubba impact structure is older than the Vredefort impact structure by about 0.2 billion years.[7] Other purported older impact structures have either poorly constrained ages (Dhala impact structure, India)[8] or highly contentious impact evidence in case of the circa 3.023 billion year old Maniitsoq structure, West Greenland[9] and the circa 2.4 billion year old Suavjärvi structure, Russia.[10] Their classification as impact structures remain controversial and unsettled.[7][11]

The dome in the centre of the impact structure was originally thought to have been formed by a volcanic explosion, but in the mid-1990s, evidence revealed it was the site of a huge bolide impact, as telltale shatter cones were discovered in the bed of the nearby Vaal River.

This impact structure is one of the few multiple-ringed impact structures on Earth, although they are more common elsewhere in the Solar System. Perhaps the best-known example is Valhalla crater on Jupiter's moon Callisto. Earth's Moon has some as well. Geological processes, such as erosion and plate tectonics, have destroyed most multiple-ring impact structures on Earth.

The impact distorted the Witwatersrand Basin which was laid down over a period of 250 million years between 950 and 700 million years before the Vredefort impact. The overlying Ventersdorp lavas and the Transvaal Supergroup which were laid down between 700 and 80 million years before the meteorite strike, were similarly distorted by the formation of the 300-kilometre-wide (190 mi) impact structure.[4][12] The rocks form partial concentric rings around the impact structure's centre today, with the oldest, the Witwatersrand rocks, forming a semicircle 25 km (16 mi) from the centre. Since the Witwatersrand rocks consist of several layers of very hard, erosion-resistant sediments (e.g. quartzites and banded ironstones),[4][13] they form the prominent arc of hills that can be seen to the northwest of the impact structure's centre in the satellite picture above. The Witwatersrand rocks are followed, in succession, by the Ventersdorp lavas at a distance of about 35 km (22 mi) from the centre, and the Transvaal Supergroup, consisting of a narrow band of the Ghaap Dolomite rocks and the Pretoria Subgroup of rocks, which together form a 25-to-30-kilometre-wide (16 to 19 mi) band beyond that.[14]

From about halfway through the Pretoria Subgroup of rocks around the impact structure's centre, the order of the rocks is reversed. Moving outwards towards where the crater rim used to be, the Ghaap Dolomite group resurfaces at 60 km (37 mi) from the centre, followed by an arc of Ventersdorp lavas, beyond which, at between 80 and 120 km (50 and 75 mi) from the centre, the Witwatersrand rocks re-emerge to form an interrupted arc of outcrops today. The Johannesburg group is the most famous one because it was here that gold was discovered in 1886.[4][14] It is thus possible that if it had not been for the Vredefort impact this gold would never have been discovered.[4]

The 40-kilometre-diameter (25 mi) centre of the Vredefort impact structure consists of a granite dome (where it is not covered by much younger rocks belonging to the Karoo Supergroup) which is an exposed part of the Kaapvaal craton, one of the oldest microcontinents which formed on Earth 3.9 billion years ago.[4] This central peak uplift, or dome, is typical of a complex impact structure, where the liquefied rocks splashed up in the wake of the meteor as it penetrated the surface.

Conservation edit

The Vredefort Dome World Heritage Site is currently subject to property development, and local owners have expressed concern regarding sewage dumping into the Vaal River and the impact structure.[15] The granting of prospecting rights around the edges of the impact structure has led environmental interests to express fear of destructive mining.

Community edit

The Vredefort Dome in the centre of the impact structure is home to four towns: Parys, Vredefort, Koppies and Venterskroon. Parys is the largest and a tourist hub; both Vredefort and Koppies mainly depend on an agricultural economy.

On 19 December 2011, a broadcasting licence was granted by ICASA to a community radio station to broadcast for the Afrikaans- and English-speaking members of the communities within the impact structure. The Afrikaans name Koepel Stereo (Dome Stereo) refers to the dome and announces its broadcast as KSFM. The station broadcasts on 94.9 MHz FM.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ University of Rochester (26 September 2022). "The asteroid that formed Vredefort crater was bigger than previously believed". Science X. from the original on 26 September 2022.
  2. ^ a b c Huber, M. S.; Kovaleva, E.; Rae, A. S. P.; Tisato, N.; Gulick, S. P. S. (August 2023). "Can Archean Impact Structures Be Discovered? A Case Study From Earth's Largest, Most Deeply Eroded Impact Structure". Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets. 128 (8). doi:10.1029/2022JE007721. ISSN 2169-9097.
  3. ^ a b c Allen, Natalie H.; Nakajima, Miki; Wünnemann, Kai; Helhoski, Søren; Trail, Dustin (2022). "A Revision of the Formation Conditions of the Vredefort Crater". Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets. 127 (8): e2022JE007186. Bibcode:2022JGRE..12707186A. doi:10.1029/2022JE007186. S2CID 251449730.
  4. ^ a b c d e f McCarthy, Terence (2005). The Story of Earth & Life. Struik Publishers. pp. 89–90, 102–107, 134–136. ISBN 978-1-77007-148-3. OCLC 883592852.
  5. ^ Kamo, S.L.; Reimold, W.U.; Krogh, T.E.; Colliston, W.P. (November 1996). "A 2.023 Ga age for the Vredefort impact event and a first report of shock metamorphosed zircons in pseudotachylitic breccias and Granophyre". Earth and Planetary Science Letters. 144 (3–4): 369–387. doi:10.1016/S0012-821X(96)00180-X.
  6. ^ Moser, D. E. (1997). "Dating the shock wave and thermal imprint of the giant Vredefort impact, South Africa". Geology. 25 (1): 7. doi:10.1130/0091-7613(1997)025<0007:DTSWAT>2.3.CO;2. ISSN 0091-7613.
  7. ^ a b Erickson, T.M., Kirkland, C.L., Timms, N.E., Cavosie, A.J. and Davison, T.M., 2020. Precise radiometric age establishes Yarrabubba, Western Australia, as Earth’s oldest recognised meteorite impact structure. Nature communications, 11(1), pp.1-8. doi:10.1038/s41467-019-13985-7
  8. ^ Pati, J.K., Qu, W.J., Koeberl, C., Reimold, W.U., Chakarvorty, M. and Schmitt, R.T., 2017. Geochemical evidence of an extraterrestrial component in impact melt breccia from the Paleoproterozoic Dhala impact structure, India. Meteoritics & Planetary Science, 52(4), pp.722-736. doi:10.1111/maps.12826
  9. ^ Garde, A.A., McDonald, I., Dyck, B. and Keulen, N., 2012. Searching for giant, ancient impact structures on Earth: the Mesoarchaean Maniitsoq structure, West Greenland. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 337, pp.197-210. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2012.04.026
  10. ^ Mashchak, M.S. and Naumov, M.V., 2012. The Suavjärvi impact structure, NW Russia. Meteoritics & Planetary Science, 47(10), pp.1644-1658. doi:10.1111/j.1945-5100.2012.01428.x
  11. ^ Reimold, W.U.; Ferrière, L.; Deutsch, A.; Koeberl, C. (2014). "Impact controversies: impact recognition criteria and related issues". Meteoritics & Planetary Science. 49 (5): 723–731. Bibcode:2014M&PS...49..723R. doi:10.1111/maps.12284. Retrieved 12 October 2023.
  12. ^ Norman, Nick; Whitfield, Gavin (2006). Geological Journeys. Struik Publishers. pp. 38–49, 60–61. ISBN 978-1-77007-062-2. OCLC 974035410.
  13. ^ Truswell, J. F (1977). The Geological Evolution of South Africa. Purnell. pp. 23–38. OCLC 488347575.
  14. ^ a b Geological map of South Africa, Lesotho and Swaziland (1970). Council for Geoscience, Geological Survey of South Africa.
  15. ^ Momberg, Eleanor (23 August 2009). "River heading for the rocks". Retrieved 22 March 2011.

External links edit

  • Parys South Africa
  • Earth Impact Database
  • Deep Impact – The Vredefort Dome
  • Satellite image of Vredefort impact structure from Google Maps
  • Impact Cratering: an overview of Mineralogical and Geochemical aspects – University of Vienna 2011-07-06 at the Wayback Machine
  • Google Earth 3d .KMZ of 25 largest craters (requires Google Earth)

vredefort, impact, structure, largest, verified, impact, structures, earth, crater, which, since, been, eroded, away, been, estimated, kilometres, across, when, formed, remaining, structure, comprising, deformed, underlying, bedrock, located, present, free, st. The Vredefort impact structure is one of the largest verified impact structures on Earth 1 The crater which has since been eroded away has been estimated at 170 kilometres 110 mi 2 to 300 km 190 mi 3 across when it was formed The remaining structure comprising the deformed underlying bedrock is located in present day Free State province of South Africa It is named after the town of Vredefort which is near its centre The structure s central uplift is known as the Vredefort Dome The impact structure was formed during the Paleoproterozoic Era 2 023 billion 4 million years ago It is the second oldest known impact structure on Earth after Yarrabubba Vredefort impact structureVredefort DomeVredefort Dome centre with the Vaal river running across it seen from space with the Operational Land Imager on Landsat 8 27 June 2018Impact crater structureConfidenceConfirmedDiameter170 300 km 110 190 mi estimated former crater diameter Age2 023 4 Ma Orosirian PaleoproterozoicExposedYesDrilledYesLocationCoordinates27 0 0 S 27 30 0 E 27 00000 S 27 50000 E 27 00000 27 50000CountrySouth AfricaProvinceFree StateLocation of Vredefort impact structureUNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficial nameVredefort DomeIncludesVredefort Dome core area The stromatolite basal fault plane site The chocolate tablet breccia site The pseudotachylite quarry siteCriteriaNatural viii Reference1162Inscription2005 29th Session Area30 000 ha 120 sq mi In 2005 the Vredefort Dome was added to the list of UNESCO World Heritage Sites for its geologic interest Contents 1 Formation and structure 2 Conservation 3 Community 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksFormation and structure edit nbsp Map of South Africa showing the location of the Vredefort Dome the remains of a 2 023 billion year old impact structure The interrupted line circle 300 km 190 mi in diameter marks the extent of the original crater nbsp The view from the top of Aasvoelkop in the heart of the Vredefort impact structure with the Vaal River and Venterskroon on its right in the backgroundThe asteroid that hit Vredefort is estimated to have been one of the largest ever to strike Earth since the Hadean Eon some four billion years ago originally thought to have been approximately 10 15 km 6 2 9 3 mi in diameter 4 As of 2022 the bolide was estimated at between 20 and 25 kilometres 12 and 16 mi in diameter and to have impacted with a vertical velocity of 15 25 kilometres per second 34 000 56 000 mph 3 The original impact structure is estimated to have had a diameter of at least 170 km 110 mi with the impact affecting the structure of the surrounding host rock in a circular region around 300 km 190 mi in diameter 2 Other estimates have placed the original crater diameter closer to 300 km 190 mi 3 The landscape has since been eroded to a depth of around 7 11 km 4 3 6 8 mi since formation obliterating the original crater The remaining structure the Vredefort Dome consists of a partial ring of hills 70 km 43 mi in diameter and is the remains of the central uplift created by the rebound of rock below the impact site after the collision 2 Estimates have placed the structure s age to be 2 023 billion years 4 million years 5 or 2 019 2 020 billion years 2 3 million years old 6 which places it in the Orosirian Period of the Paleoproterozoic Era It is the second oldest universally accepted impact structure on Earth In comparison it is about 10 older than the Sudbury Basin impact at 1 849 billion years and the Yarrabubba impact structure is older than the Vredefort impact structure by about 0 2 billion years 7 Other purported older impact structures have either poorly constrained ages Dhala impact structure India 8 or highly contentious impact evidence in case of the circa 3 023 billion year old Maniitsoq structure West Greenland 9 and the circa 2 4 billion year old Suavjarvi structure Russia 10 Their classification as impact structures remain controversial and unsettled 7 11 The dome in the centre of the impact structure was originally thought to have been formed by a volcanic explosion but in the mid 1990s evidence revealed it was the site of a huge bolide impact as telltale shatter cones were discovered in the bed of the nearby Vaal River This impact structure is one of the few multiple ringed impact structures on Earth although they are more common elsewhere in the Solar System Perhaps the best known example is Valhalla crater on Jupiter s moon Callisto Earth s Moon has some as well Geological processes such as erosion and plate tectonics have destroyed most multiple ring impact structures on Earth The impact distorted the Witwatersrand Basin which was laid down over a period of 250 million years between 950 and 700 million years before the Vredefort impact The overlying Ventersdorp lavas and the Transvaal Supergroup which were laid down between 700 and 80 million years before the meteorite strike were similarly distorted by the formation of the 300 kilometre wide 190 mi impact structure 4 12 The rocks form partial concentric rings around the impact structure s centre today with the oldest the Witwatersrand rocks forming a semicircle 25 km 16 mi from the centre Since the Witwatersrand rocks consist of several layers of very hard erosion resistant sediments e g quartzites and banded ironstones 4 13 they form the prominent arc of hills that can be seen to the northwest of the impact structure s centre in the satellite picture above The Witwatersrand rocks are followed in succession by the Ventersdorp lavas at a distance of about 35 km 22 mi from the centre and the Transvaal Supergroup consisting of a narrow band of the Ghaap Dolomite rocks and the Pretoria Subgroup of rocks which together form a 25 to 30 kilometre wide 16 to 19 mi band beyond that 14 From about halfway through the Pretoria Subgroup of rocks around the impact structure s centre the order of the rocks is reversed Moving outwards towards where the crater rim used to be the Ghaap Dolomite group resurfaces at 60 km 37 mi from the centre followed by an arc of Ventersdorp lavas beyond which at between 80 and 120 km 50 and 75 mi from the centre the Witwatersrand rocks re emerge to form an interrupted arc of outcrops today The Johannesburg group is the most famous one because it was here that gold was discovered in 1886 4 14 It is thus possible that if it had not been for the Vredefort impact this gold would never have been discovered 4 The 40 kilometre diameter 25 mi centre of the Vredefort impact structure consists of a granite dome where it is not covered by much younger rocks belonging to the Karoo Supergroup which is an exposed part of the Kaapvaal craton one of the oldest microcontinents which formed on Earth 3 9 billion years ago 4 This central peak uplift or dome is typical of a complex impact structure where the liquefied rocks splashed up in the wake of the meteor as it penetrated the surface nbsp A timeline of the Earth s history indicating when the Vredefort impact structure was formed in relation to some of the other important South African geological events W indicates when the Witwatersrand Supergroup was laid down C the Cape Supergroup and K the Karoo Supergroup The graph also indicates the period during which banded ironstone formations were formed on earth indicative of an oxygen free atmosphere The Earth s crust was wholly or partially molten during the Hadean Eon One of the first microcontinents to form was the Kaapvaal Craton which is exposed at the centre of the Vredefort Dome and again north of Johannesburg nbsp A schematic diagram of a NE left to SW right cross section through the 2 020 billion year old Vredefort impact structure and how it distorted the contemporary geological structures The present erosion level is shown Johannesburg is where the Witwatersrand Basin the yellow layer is exposed at the present surface line just inside the impact structure s rim on the left Not to scale Conservation editThe Vredefort Dome World Heritage Site is currently subject to property development and local owners have expressed concern regarding sewage dumping into the Vaal River and the impact structure 15 The granting of prospecting rights around the edges of the impact structure has led environmental interests to express fear of destructive mining Community editThe Vredefort Dome in the centre of the impact structure is home to four towns Parys Vredefort Koppies and Venterskroon Parys is the largest and a tourist hub both Vredefort and Koppies mainly depend on an agricultural economy On 19 December 2011 a broadcasting licence was granted by ICASA to a community radio station to broadcast for the Afrikaans and English speaking members of the communities within the impact structure The Afrikaans name Koepel Stereo Dome Stereo refers to the dome and announces its broadcast as KSFM The station broadcasts on 94 9 MHz FM See also edit nbsp Geology portal nbsp South Africa portalList of impact craters on Earth List of possible impact structures on Earth Deniliquin multiple ring featureReferences edit University of Rochester 26 September 2022 The asteroid that formed Vredefort crater was bigger than previously believed Science X Archived from the original on 26 September 2022 a b c Huber M S Kovaleva E Rae A S P Tisato N Gulick S P S August 2023 Can Archean Impact Structures Be Discovered A Case Study From Earth s Largest Most Deeply Eroded Impact Structure Journal of Geophysical Research Planets 128 8 doi 10 1029 2022JE007721 ISSN 2169 9097 a b c Allen Natalie H Nakajima Miki Wunnemann Kai Helhoski Soren Trail Dustin 2022 A Revision of the Formation Conditions of the Vredefort Crater Journal of Geophysical Research Planets 127 8 e2022JE007186 Bibcode 2022JGRE 12707186A doi 10 1029 2022JE007186 S2CID 251449730 a b c d e f McCarthy Terence 2005 The Story of Earth amp Life Struik Publishers pp 89 90 102 107 134 136 ISBN 978 1 77007 148 3 OCLC 883592852 Kamo S L Reimold W U Krogh T E Colliston W P November 1996 A 2 023 Ga age for the Vredefort impact event and a first report of shock metamorphosed zircons in pseudotachylitic breccias and Granophyre Earth and Planetary Science Letters 144 3 4 369 387 doi 10 1016 S0012 821X 96 00180 X Moser D E 1997 Dating the shock wave and thermal imprint of the giant Vredefort impact South Africa Geology 25 1 7 doi 10 1130 0091 7613 1997 025 lt 0007 DTSWAT gt 2 3 CO 2 ISSN 0091 7613 a b Erickson T M Kirkland C L Timms N E Cavosie A J and Davison T M 2020 Precise radiometric age establishes Yarrabubba Western Australia as Earth s oldest recognised meteorite impact structure Nature communications 11 1 pp 1 8 doi 10 1038 s41467 019 13985 7 Pati J K Qu W J Koeberl C Reimold W U Chakarvorty M and Schmitt R T 2017 Geochemical evidence of an extraterrestrial component in impact melt breccia from the Paleoproterozoic Dhala impact structure India Meteoritics amp Planetary Science 52 4 pp 722 736 doi 10 1111 maps 12826 Garde A A McDonald I Dyck B and Keulen N 2012 Searching for giant ancient impact structures on Earth the Mesoarchaean Maniitsoq structure West Greenland Earth and Planetary Science Letters 337 pp 197 210 doi 10 1016 j epsl 2012 04 026 Mashchak M S and Naumov M V 2012 The Suavjarvi impact structure NW Russia Meteoritics amp Planetary Science 47 10 pp 1644 1658 doi 10 1111 j 1945 5100 2012 01428 x Reimold W U Ferriere L Deutsch A Koeberl C 2014 Impact controversies impact recognition criteria and related issues Meteoritics amp Planetary Science 49 5 723 731 Bibcode 2014M amp PS 49 723R doi 10 1111 maps 12284 Retrieved 12 October 2023 Norman Nick Whitfield Gavin 2006 Geological Journeys Struik Publishers pp 38 49 60 61 ISBN 978 1 77007 062 2 OCLC 974035410 Truswell J F 1977 The Geological Evolution of South Africa Purnell pp 23 38 OCLC 488347575 a b Geological map of South Africa Lesotho and Swaziland 1970 Council for Geoscience Geological Survey of South Africa Momberg Eleanor 23 August 2009 River heading for the rocks Retrieved 22 March 2011 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Vredefort Dome Parys South Africa Impact Cratering Research Group University of the Witwatersrand Earth Impact Database Deep Impact The Vredefort Dome Satellite image of Vredefort impact structure from Google Maps Impact Cratering an overview of Mineralogical and Geochemical aspects University of Vienna Archived 2011 07 06 at the Wayback Machine Google Earth 3d KMZ of 25 largest craters requires Google Earth Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vredefort impact structure amp oldid 1187169017, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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