The Kara and Ust-Kara impact structures (USSR) and their relevance to the K/T boundary event

The Kara and Ust-Kara craters are twin impact structures situated at about 69 deg 10 min N; 65 deg 00 min E at the Kara Sea. For Kara a diameter of about 55 km would be a very conservative estimate, and field observations indicate a maximum current diameter of about 60 km. The diameter of Ust-Kara h...

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Main Authors: Burke, K., Sharpton, V. L., Murali, A. V., Koeberl, Christian, Harrison, T. M., Nazarov, M. A.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 1988
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19890011970
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spelling ftnasantrs:oai:casi.ntrs.nasa.gov:19890011970 2023-05-15T16:59:55+02:00 The Kara and Ust-Kara impact structures (USSR) and their relevance to the K/T boundary event Burke, K. Sharpton, V. L. Murali, A. V. Koeberl, Christian Harrison, T. M. Nazarov, M. A. Unclassified, Unlimited, Publicly available JAN 1, 1988 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19890011970 unknown Document ID: 19890011970 Accession ID: 89N21341 http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19890011970 No Copyright CASI GEOPHYSICS Global Catastrophes in Earth History: An Interdisciplinary Conference on Impacts, Volcanism, and Mass Mortality; p 95-96 1988 ftnasantrs 2015-03-15T05:57:13Z The Kara and Ust-Kara craters are twin impact structures situated at about 69 deg 10 min N; 65 deg 00 min E at the Kara Sea. For Kara a diameter of about 55 km would be a very conservative estimate, and field observations indicate a maximum current diameter of about 60 km. The diameter of Ust-Kara has to be larger than 16 km. A better estimate might be 25 km but in all likelihood it is even larger. Suevites and impactites from the Kara area have been known since the beginning of the century, but had been misidentified as glacial deposits. Only about 15 years ago the impact origin of the two structures was demonstrated, following the recognition of shock metamorphism in the area. The composition of the target rocks is mirrored by the composition of the clasts within the suevites. In the southern part of Kara, Permian shales and limestones are sometimes accompanied by diabasic dykes, similar to in the central uplift. Due to the high degree of shock metamorphism the shocked magmatic rocks are not easily identified, although most of them seem to be of diabasic or dioritic composition. The impact melts (tagamites) are grey to dark grey fine grained crystallized rocks showing very fine mineral components and are the product of shock-melting with later recrystallization. The impact glasses show a layered structure, inclusions, and vesicles, and have colors ranging from translucent white over brown and grey to black. A complete geochemical characterization of the Kara and Ust-Kara impact craters was attempted by analyzing more than 40 samples of target rocks, shocked rocks, suevites, impact melts, and impact glasses for major and trace elements. Other/Unknown Material Kara Sea NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS) Kara Sea Ust’-Kara ENVELOPE(64.923,64.923,69.244,69.244)
institution Open Polar
collection NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
op_collection_id ftnasantrs
language unknown
topic GEOPHYSICS
spellingShingle GEOPHYSICS
Burke, K.
Sharpton, V. L.
Murali, A. V.
Koeberl, Christian
Harrison, T. M.
Nazarov, M. A.
The Kara and Ust-Kara impact structures (USSR) and their relevance to the K/T boundary event
topic_facet GEOPHYSICS
description The Kara and Ust-Kara craters are twin impact structures situated at about 69 deg 10 min N; 65 deg 00 min E at the Kara Sea. For Kara a diameter of about 55 km would be a very conservative estimate, and field observations indicate a maximum current diameter of about 60 km. The diameter of Ust-Kara has to be larger than 16 km. A better estimate might be 25 km but in all likelihood it is even larger. Suevites and impactites from the Kara area have been known since the beginning of the century, but had been misidentified as glacial deposits. Only about 15 years ago the impact origin of the two structures was demonstrated, following the recognition of shock metamorphism in the area. The composition of the target rocks is mirrored by the composition of the clasts within the suevites. In the southern part of Kara, Permian shales and limestones are sometimes accompanied by diabasic dykes, similar to in the central uplift. Due to the high degree of shock metamorphism the shocked magmatic rocks are not easily identified, although most of them seem to be of diabasic or dioritic composition. The impact melts (tagamites) are grey to dark grey fine grained crystallized rocks showing very fine mineral components and are the product of shock-melting with later recrystallization. The impact glasses show a layered structure, inclusions, and vesicles, and have colors ranging from translucent white over brown and grey to black. A complete geochemical characterization of the Kara and Ust-Kara impact craters was attempted by analyzing more than 40 samples of target rocks, shocked rocks, suevites, impact melts, and impact glasses for major and trace elements.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Burke, K.
Sharpton, V. L.
Murali, A. V.
Koeberl, Christian
Harrison, T. M.
Nazarov, M. A.
author_facet Burke, K.
Sharpton, V. L.
Murali, A. V.
Koeberl, Christian
Harrison, T. M.
Nazarov, M. A.
author_sort Burke, K.
title The Kara and Ust-Kara impact structures (USSR) and their relevance to the K/T boundary event
title_short The Kara and Ust-Kara impact structures (USSR) and their relevance to the K/T boundary event
title_full The Kara and Ust-Kara impact structures (USSR) and their relevance to the K/T boundary event
title_fullStr The Kara and Ust-Kara impact structures (USSR) and their relevance to the K/T boundary event
title_full_unstemmed The Kara and Ust-Kara impact structures (USSR) and their relevance to the K/T boundary event
title_sort kara and ust-kara impact structures (ussr) and their relevance to the k/t boundary event
publishDate 1988
url http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19890011970
op_coverage Unclassified, Unlimited, Publicly available
long_lat ENVELOPE(64.923,64.923,69.244,69.244)
geographic Kara Sea
Ust’-Kara
geographic_facet Kara Sea
Ust’-Kara
genre Kara Sea
genre_facet Kara Sea
op_source CASI
op_relation Document ID: 19890011970
Accession ID: 89N21341
http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19890011970
op_rights No Copyright
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