- Darwin Glass
Darwin glass is a natural
glass found south of Queenstown inWest Coast, Tasmania . It takes its name from Mount Darwin in theWest Coast Range , where it was first reported, and later gave its name toDarwin Crater , a probableimpact crater , and the inferred source of the glass.Occurrence
Fragments of Darwin glass are found scattered over a 410 km² area. Such an area is called a
strewn field . On slopes and flat ground between 250 and 500 m elevation, the glass occurs withquartzite fragments buried underpeat and soil. The peat is normally around 20 cm thick, and the quartzite fragment horizon is typically 30 cm thick. On mountain peaks higher than 500 m, the bedrock is directly exposed to the air, and Darwin glass occurs occasionally on the surface. In valleys below 220 m the Darwin glass is buried below peat and sediments. The glass occurs north, west and south from the crater. Its distribution extends toKelly Basin and the lower northeast shore ofMacquarie Harbour . Northwards it extends almost to theLyell Highway andCrotty Dam . Darwin glass is rare in the crater itself.In controlled excavations of gravel deposits the abundance of Darwin glass was found to vary from 0.3 to 47 kg/m³. The highest abundance was found about 2 km from the crater, with the average abundance estimated at 3.4 kg/m³ of gravel over a 50 km² study area near the crater. From this it can be estimated that about 25000 tons of Darwin glass, or about 10000 m³, occurs in this 50 km² area. The amount of glass is large compared with the size of the crater. Preservation is helped by acid ground water which does not dissolve the glass, but this alone cannot explain the glass abundance. There is so much glass present that the glass must have been more copiously produced than in other meteorite impacts of similar size. [ [http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meetings/largeimpacts2003/pdf/4057.pdf Distribution and Abundance of Darwin Impact Glass] . KT Howard and PW Haines]
Nature
The glass is light to dark green, white or black. The glass takes the form of twisted masses, fragments or chunks up to 10 cm. Internally it has a flowing texture defined by lines of elliptical bubbles. [Keiren T Howard, Peter Haines, 2004, "Fire in the Sky above South West Tasmania". 17th Australian Geological Conference] There are two kinds of Darwin glass when composition is measured. Type 1 is normally white or green whereas type 2 is normally black to dark green. The dark glass contains less
silica and moremagnesium andiron than the light green glass. The dark glass is also enriched inchromium ,nickel andcobalt . A possible explanation for the chemical differences is that, in addition to being mainly composed of melted localmetamorphic rock s, the type 2 glass also contains a component of extraterrestrial material from the meteorite. [ [http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meetings/metsoc2003/pdf/5079.pdf K.T. Howard, "Geochemical Systematics In Darwin Impact Glass", 66th Annual Meteoritical Society Meeting (2003)] ] Darwin glass has been dated at about 816,000 years old using argon dating methods. [Ching-Hua Lo et al, 2002, "Laser Fusion argon-40/argon-39 ages of Darwin Impact Glasses", Meteoritics and Planetary Science 37, p 1555-2002 [http://argonlab.gl.ntu.edu.tw/papers/Lo-MPS02.pdf paper] ]Crater
The glass is an
impactite resulting from the melting of local rocks due to the impact of a largemeteorite . The assumed source is a 1.2 km diameter topographic depression, known as Darwin Crater, situated at 42.18.39 South, 145.39.41 East. The crater is filled with 230 m ofsediment s andbreccia . A crater of that size would be created by a meteorite 20 to 50 m in diameter and its impact with Earth would release 20megaton s of energy.External links
* http://www.meteorite-times.com/Back_Links/2002/June/colectors_corner.htm
References
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