You are reading a thread in the LOP Archives. Replying has been disabled in the archives. If needed, please request a moderator to move it back to the main forum.
Members can use the the report abusive post link for this.



News
news Satellite Phone Encryption Cracked
news States Seek Currencies Made of Silver and Gold
news Anonymous Eavesdrops on FBI Anti-Anonymous Strategy Meeting
news Dead bodies stored in cupboards of London Underground Tube
news Flesh-eating bug that you can catch on the bus or train is spreading in the UK
news Taliban will rule Afghanistan again, says leaked US military report
news Are We Ready for a ‘Morality Pill’?
news Why Dinosaurs Were So Huge
news U.S. Military Gets Self Guided Sniper Bullet
news Biggest, Fastest, Bloodiest: Earth’s Most Extreme Insects
news Japanese Atomic Agency Exposes Nuclear Accident in Beijing
news JFK Library Releases Last Of His Secret Tapes
news Video: Divers find large, unexplained object at bottom of Baltic Sea
news Watch a luminous mouse embryo grow from cell to creature in one minute
news “Secret” Worst Case Fukushima Scenario Report Leaked
news Saudi warns of possible Mideast nuclear arms race
news New drone has no pilot anywhere, so who’s accountable?
news Google Reincarnates Dead Paper Mill as Data Center of Future
news Father locked daughter in bathroom for 9 years
news Beyond the Cashless Society: IBM's Vision for the Future

Username:
Password: or Register
 
Thread Rating:
  • 3 Votes - 5 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Giant "Ring" in Congo might be giant IMPACT CRATER
MarkusMAXIMUS
Resident Observer
User ID: 774 (OP)
03-11-2010 04:07 PM

Posts: 3,849



Post: #1
deal Giant "Ring" in Congo might be giant IMPACT CRATER
Link

[Image: _47447659_dr_congo_crater_466.jpg]

Deforestation has revealed what could be a giant impact crater in Central Africa, scientists say.

The 36-46km-wide feature, identified in DR Congo, may be one of the largest such structures discovered in the last decade.

Italian researchers considered other origins for the ring, but say these are unlikely.

They presented their findings at the recent Lunar and Planetary Science Conference in Texas, US.

The ring shape is clearly visible in the satellite image by TerraMetrics Inc reproduced on this page.

Only about 25 terrestrial impact craters are of comparable size or larger, according to the web-based Earth Impact Database.

Giovanni Monegato, from the University of Padova, said the feature was revealed only after trees were cleared from the area over the last decade.

The Unia River flows around the ring structure, underlining its round shape. The central part of the Wembo-Nyama feature is irregular and about 550m in elevation.

This is about 50-60m higher than the depression where the river flows. Although this might sound counter-intuitive, experts say that impact craters can sometimes lift up dense rocks. The surrounding rocks may subsequently erode, leaving a dome.

Confirmation needed

The putative crater lacks a well-defined outer ridge, though the University of Padova team says this could be explained by deep weathering and erosion in the tropical climate.

They add that the drainage pattern in the ring is very similar to those found in large impact craters in humid environments.

Mr Monegato said the team would now have to travel to the region to carry out field studies. Researchers would examine rocks from the site for tell-tale signs associated with space impacts.

These might include shocked quartz - a form of the mineral which occurs where rocks have been hit suddenly by a massive force. It is found only at nuclear explosion sites and at asteroid impact sites.

Finding such evidence will be crucial to confirm an impact origin over other processes which might explain the structure.

The researchers have considered whether volcanism or salt diapirism (a process where evaporite minerals intrude vertically into surrounding rock, forming dome-like structures on the surface) could be responsible for the annulus.

But Mr Monegato and his colleagues say the known geology of the region - along with other features of the structure (for example, no known salt diapirs reach such a great size) - appear to rule out such explanations.

"I am quite optimistic about an impact crater origin for this ring," Mr Monegato told BBC News.

If it is an impact structure, the scientists estimate it could have been punched into the crust by a space rock measuring about 2km across.

Further studies will be required to accurately determine an age for the ring, but it appears to post-date the Jurassic Period.

"The King asked his wise men for some single thing that would make him happy when he was sad, but sad when he was happy. They consulted and came back with a ring engraved with the message:
'This Too Shall Pass.'"
Quote this message in a reply
Old Whatshisname
Registered User
User ID: 2152
03-11-2010 04:58 PM

Posts: 4,275



Post: #2
RE:Giant "Ring" in Congo might be giant IMPACT CRATER
MarkusMaximus  Wrote:
Link

[Image: _47447659_dr_congo_crater_466.jpg]

Good post!

For the past 15 or 20 years, most of us have looked at the Chicxulub Strike -- the dinosaur-killer -- as the be-all and end-all of asteroid/meteorite strikes, but we're seeing more and more records of ancient impacts. As a matter of fiact, IIRC, there's a huge crater in northern Quebec suggesting a strike which some paleo-geologists believe may have been the cause of the Permian-Triassic boundary, which was a lot worse than the one which killed off the dinosaurs.

Anyway, here are some more impact craters.

"7 billion people. 7 billion dreams. 7 billion chances for engineers to turn dreams into reality."
National Engineers Week 2012 February 19-25
Quote this message in a reply
Full Circle
We Are Legion
User ID: 4083
03-11-2010 06:31 PM

 



Post: #3
RE:Giant "Ring" in Congo might be giant IMPACT CRATER
I've seen a lot of those ones in the article OldWHN linked to on google earth. And yeah, it looks like Canada got hit quite a bit. Scream1
Quote this message in a reply



Contact UsConspiracy Forum. No reg. required! Return to TopReturn to ContentRSS Syndication

Valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional Valid CSS 2.1