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Monday, August 23, 2004
WRITER: Phil Williams, 706/542-8501, phil@franklin.uga.edu
SOURCE: Michael Roden, 706/542-2416, mroden@uga.edu
WELL-PRESERVED LAYER OF MATERIAL EJECTED FROM CHESAPEAKE
BAY METEOR-STRIKE DISCOVERED, RESEARCHERS REPORT
ATHENS, Ga. – People in Georgia’s Dodge and Bleckley
counties have for years picked up small pieces of natural glass called “Georgiaites,” which
were produced by an unknown asteroid or comet impact millions of years
ago. Just where these small, translucent green objects came from,
however, was unclear.
Now, researchers at the University of Georgia, studying a kaolin
mine in Warren County, Ga., have found a layer of tiny grains, which
indicate that the grains and the Georgiaites were products
of a recently discovered impact that left a huge crater beneath the
waters of the Chesapeake Bay.
“We knew we had these tektites here, but we’d never found
them in place,” said Dr. Michael Roden, a geologist and part
of the research team. “We believe this layer is further evidence
that the Chesapeake Bay impact was an enormous event with widespread
consequences.”
The research was published in the August issue of the journal Geology.
The work was spearheaded by UGA graduate student Scott Harris (now
of Brown University) in collaboration with Roden, Dr. Paul Schroeder
and Steven Holland of UGA, Dr. Ed Albin of Fernbank and Dr. Mack Duncan
of J.M. Huber Corporation.
Tektites are brown to green glassy objects, generally small and rounded,
and thought to be of extraterrestrial origin. The only other state
in the U. S., beside Georgia, where they have been found in abundance,
is Texas. Some 1,700 have been found in Georgia to date, and potassium-argon
geochronology has dated them to around 35 million years of age.
The Chesapeake Bay impact crater was only discovered about a decade
ago, but before the current discovery, there was no known deposition
layer from it extant, and it was unclear whether Georgiaites were
the result of the cataclysmic collision of the Chesapeake Bay bolide
with the Earth. (“Bolide” is a generic term for an impacting
body.)
The now-unused kaolin mine in Warren County where the discovery was
made was near the sea’s edge in ancient times. This former shore,
now across the central part of Georgia, is more or less coincident
with the Fall Line, and marks the place where ancient seas lapped
the land. The impact in the Chesapeake Bay clearly caused a huge amount
of material, both from the Earth and the asteroid, to become airborne,
and the layer—discovered at a depth of 25 feet in the kaolin
mine—was probably laid down by the event.
It was an active time: In the period between 34 million and 37 million
years , ago, at least five comets and/or asteroids collided with the
Earth. Since some of the events may have caused climate alterations
and caused at least regional disruptions of ecosystems, knowing more
about the ejecta from the impacts is important.
The layer reported in Geology is perhaps the most easily
accessible, undisturbed layer of materials that probably came from
the Chesapeake Bay impact and can therefore add knowledge about that
event. The search for the layer, led by Harris, led to the discovery
of so-called shocked quartz—grains whose physical “thumbprint” mark
them as having originated from the extremely high pressures characteristic
of an impact event.
Just how big the explosion was when this celestial visitor hit the
Earth is unclear, but Roden said it was many times bigger than such
events as the explosions of Mt. St. Helen’s or even Krakatoa.
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