- Saint Martin crater
Saint Martin is an impact crater in
Manitoba ,Canada .It is convert|40|km|abbr=on in
diameter and its age is estimated at 220 ± 32million year s (Triassic ). The crater is not exposed at the surface.Related impact events
Geophysicist David Rowley of theUniversity of Chicago , working with John Spray of theUniversity of New Brunswick and Simon Kelley of theOpen University , discovered that the Saint Martin crater was one of five craters in Europe and North America that formed a chain, indicating the breakup and subsequent impact of an asteroid or comet. The other craters areManicouagan crater in northernQuebec ,Rochechouart crater inFrance ,Obolon' crater inUkraine , andRed Wing crater inNorth Dakota .Kelley had developed a technique to precisely date impact craters, using laser
argon-argon dating of the glass formed by the impacts, and he and Kelley sought Rowley's help to determine how the craters were aligned when the impacts occurred, since due toplate tectonics , the locations have moved large distances in the intervening 214 million years.Three of the craters - Rochechouart, Manicouagan and Saint Martin - formed a convert|5000|km|abbr=on chain at latitude 22.8° N, while Obolon' and Red Wing lay on identical declination paths with Rochechouart and Saint Martin respectively. All of the craters had previously been known and studied, but their paleoalignment had never before been demonstrated. Rowley has said that the chance that these craters could be aligned like this due to chance are nearly zero. [Citation | last = Steele | first = Diana | author-link = | last2 = | first2 = | author2-link = | title = Crater chain points to impact of fragmented comet | newspaper = University of Chicago Chronicle | pages = | year = | date = 19 March 1998 | url = http://chronicle.uchicago.edu/980319/craters.shtml]
Notes
External links
* [http://www.unb.ca/passc/ImpactDatabase/images/saint-martin.htm Earth Impact Database]
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