- Foelsche crater
Foelsche is a partly buried
impact structure (orastrobleme ), the eroded remnant of a formerimpact crater . It is situated at latitude 16° 40' S and longitude 136° 47' E in theNorthern Territory ,Australia , and named after the nearby Foelsche River. Although little of it is exposed at the surface, and no crater shaped topography is evident, the circular nature of the feature is obvious on aeromagnetic images, a factor that led to its discoverycite journal | author=Haines PW, Rawlings DJ | title=The Foelsche structure, Northern Territory, Australia: an impact crater of probable Neoproterozoic age | journal=Meteoritics and Planetary Science | volume=37 | issue= | year=2002 | pages=269–280 | id= ] .The impact occurred into flat-lying
Mesoproterozoic sedimentary rock s of theMcArthur Basin and most of the crater is covered by a semi-circular hill of flat-lyingNeoproterozoic sedimentary rock. The only exposure of the crater itself are scattered outcrops of deformedsandstone andbreccia around the northern edge of the overlying hill, which are inferred to be remnants of the crater rim. The rim is about 6 km in diameter. Evidence indicating an impact origin for the feature includes an abundance ofshocked quartz grains in the sedimentary rocks overlying the crater; these are assumed to have been eroded from the floor of the crater ] . The prominent circular aeromagnetic anomaly which marks the hidden crater is believed to have been caused by the disruption of a horizontal layer of magnetic rock (igneous sill) by the impact event ] ,cite journal | author=Hawke PJ | title=Some ring-like magnetic anomalies in impact structures and their possible causes | journal=3rd International Conference on Large Meteorite Impacts, August 2003, Nordlingen, Germany | volume= | issue= | year=2003 | pages=abstract 4064 | id= ] .The age of Foelsche is not well constrained, but it must be younger than the
Mesoproterozoic target rocks and older than theNeoproterozoic rocks that partly fill the crater; it has been argued that the age is most likely Neoproterozoic because it appears that the crater was covered by sediments soon after the impact event ] .References
External links
* [http://www.unb.ca/passc/ImpactDatabase/images/foelsche.htm Foelsche at the Earth Impact Database]
* [http://maps.google.com/maps?q=Australia&ie=UTF8&om=1&z=12&ll=-16.670729,136.780815&spn=0.142411,0.290794&t=k Foelsche on Google Maps]
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