Space News from SpaceDaily.com
IRON AND ICE
The world's oldest crater from a meteorite isn't an impact crater after all
by Staff Writers
TECHNOLOGY NEWS
Commercial UAV Expo | Sept 2-4, 2025 | Las Vegas

Waterloo, Canada (SPX) Mar 17, 2021
Several years after scientists discovered what was considered the oldest crater a meteorite made on the planet, another team found it's actually the result of normal geological processes.

During fieldwork at the Archean Maniitsoq structure in Greenland, an international team of scientists led by the University of Waterloo's Chris Yakymchuk found the features of this region are inconsistent with an impact crater. In 2012, a different team identified it as the remnant of a three-billion-year-old meteorite crater.

"Zircon crystals in the rock are like little time capsules," said Yakymchuk, a professor in Waterloo's Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences. "They preserve ancient damage caused by shockwaves you get from a meteorite impact. We found no such damage in them."

Additionally, there are multiple places where the rocks melted and recrystallized deep in the Earth. This process--called metamorphism--would occur almost instantaneously if produced from an impact. The Waterloo-led team found it happened 40 million years later than the earlier group proposed.

"We went there to explore the area for potential mineral exploration, and it was through close examination of the area and data collected since 2012 that we concluded the features are inconsistent with a meteorite impact," Yakymchuk said.

"While we were disappointed that we weren't working in a structure that was the result of a meteorite hitting the planet three billion years ago, science is about advancing knowledge through discovery, and our understanding of the Earth's ancient history continues to evolve. Our findings provide scientific data for resource companies and Greenlandic prospectors to find new mineral resources."

Research Report: "Stirred not shaken; critical evaluation of a proposed Archean meteorite impact in West Greenland"

Related Links
University Of Waterloo
Asteroid and Comet Mission News, Science and Technology



IRON AND ICE
Asteroid dust found in crater closes case of dinosaur extinction
Austin TX (SPX) Feb 25, 2021
Researchers believe they have closed the case of what killed the dinosaurs, definitively linking their extinction with an asteroid that slammed into Earth 66 million years ago by finding a key piece of evidence: asteroid dust inside the impact crater. Death by asteroid rather than by a series of volcanic eruptions or some other global calamity has been the leading hypothesis since the 1980s, when scientists found asteroid dust in the geologic layer that marks the extinction of the dinosaurs. This
IRON AND ICE
Reports: Biden to tap Bill Nelson as NASA administrator

With SpaceX, ISS enters 'Golden Age' But what comes next

Keeping up with Thomas

ISS crew once again uses tea leaves to locate air leak in Russian module Zvezda

IRON AND ICE
FAA approves renewal of Orbital Sciences launch operator licenses

NASA, SpaceX Sign Joint Spaceflight Safety Agreement

Successful test for NASA's giant Moon rocket

Peraton awarded US Army hypersonic testing and evaluation contract

IRON AND ICE
Perseverance captures the sounds of driving on Mars

Is there life on mars today and where

For some scientists, Mars 2020 is a mission of perseverance

New study challenges long-held theory of fate of Martian Water

IRON AND ICE
China advances space cooperation in 2020: blue book

China selects astronauts for space station program

China tests high-thrust rocket engine for upcoming space station missions

China has over 300 satellites in orbit

IRON AND ICE
NASA to Host Virtual Symposium Exploring Rise of Commercial Space

Umbra hits regulatory "jackpot" for its satellite constellation able to see a soda can from space

City under pressure to invest into UK space industry

Pioneering UK space technology gets government cash boost

IRON AND ICE
Airbus pioneers first satellite factory in space

ThinKom antenna design offers flexible installation options for special-purpose aircraft

Spacepath Communications to provide solid-state amplifiers for US Market

NAV CANADA awards Raytheon UK contract for secondary surveillance radars to manage Canadian airspace

IRON AND ICE
ASU scientists determine origin of strange interstellar object

SwRI researcher theorizes worlds with underground oceans support, conceal life

How the habitability of exoplanets is influenced by their rocks

There might be many planets with water-rich atmospheres

IRON AND ICE
SwRI scientists help identify the first stratospheric winds measured on Jupiter

Juno reveals dark origins of one of Jupiter's grand light shows

Jupiter's Great Red Spot feeds on smaller storms

SwRI scientists image a bright meteoroid explosion in Jupiter's atmosphere



Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2018 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS newswire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement