The biology of impact craters: a review

Impact craters contain ecosystems that are often very different from the ecosystems that surround them. On Earth over 150 impact craters have been identified in a wide diversity of biomes. All natural events that can cause localized disruption of ecosystems have quite distinct patterns of recovery....

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Published in:Biological Reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society
Main Authors: Cockell, Charles S., Lee, Pascal
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:https://oro.open.ac.uk/4569/
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spelling ftopenunivgb:oai:oro.open.ac.uk:4569 2024-06-23T07:52:21+00:00 The biology of impact craters: a review Cockell, Charles S. Lee, Pascal 2002-08-01 https://oro.open.ac.uk/4569/ unknown Cockell, Charles S. <https://oro.open.ac.uk/view/person/csc235.html> and Lee, Pascal (2002). The biology of impact craters: a review. Biological Reviews, 77(3) pp. 279–310. Journal Item PeerReviewed 2002 ftopenunivgb 2024-06-05T00:37:03Z Impact craters contain ecosystems that are often very different from the ecosystems that surround them. On Earth over 150 impact craters have been identified in a wide diversity of biomes. All natural events that can cause localized disruption of ecosystems have quite distinct patterns of recovery. Impact events are unique in that they are the only extraterrestrial mechanism capable of disrupting an ecosystem locally in space and time. Thus, elucidating the chronological sequence of change at the sites of impacts is of ecological interest. In this synthetic review we use the existing literature, coupled with our own observations at the Haughton impact structure, Devon Island, Nunavut, Canada to consider the patterns of biological recovery at the site of impact craters and the ecological characteristics of impact craters. Three phases of recovery are suggested. The Phase of Thermal Biology, a phase associated with the localized, ephemeral thermal anomaly generated by an impact event. The Phase of Impact Succession and Climax, a phase marked by multiple primary and secondary succession events both in the aquatic realm (impact crater-lakes) and terrestrial realm (colonization of paleolacustrine deposits and impact-generated substrata) that are followed by periods of climax ecology. In the case of large-scale impact events (> 10 4 Mt), this latter phase may also be influenced by successional changes in the global environment. Finally, during the Phase of Ecological Assimilation, the disappearance of the surface geological expression of an impact structure results in a concomitant loss of ecological distinctiveness. In extreme cases, the impact structure is buried. Impact succession displays similarities and differences to succession following other agents of ecological disturbance, particularly volcanism. Article in Journal/Newspaper Devon Island Nunavut The Open University: Open Research Online (ORO) Nunavut Canada Devon Island ENVELOPE(-88.000,-88.000,75.252,75.252) Biological Reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society 77 3 279 310
institution Open Polar
collection The Open University: Open Research Online (ORO)
op_collection_id ftopenunivgb
language unknown
description Impact craters contain ecosystems that are often very different from the ecosystems that surround them. On Earth over 150 impact craters have been identified in a wide diversity of biomes. All natural events that can cause localized disruption of ecosystems have quite distinct patterns of recovery. Impact events are unique in that they are the only extraterrestrial mechanism capable of disrupting an ecosystem locally in space and time. Thus, elucidating the chronological sequence of change at the sites of impacts is of ecological interest. In this synthetic review we use the existing literature, coupled with our own observations at the Haughton impact structure, Devon Island, Nunavut, Canada to consider the patterns of biological recovery at the site of impact craters and the ecological characteristics of impact craters. Three phases of recovery are suggested. The Phase of Thermal Biology, a phase associated with the localized, ephemeral thermal anomaly generated by an impact event. The Phase of Impact Succession and Climax, a phase marked by multiple primary and secondary succession events both in the aquatic realm (impact crater-lakes) and terrestrial realm (colonization of paleolacustrine deposits and impact-generated substrata) that are followed by periods of climax ecology. In the case of large-scale impact events (> 10 4 Mt), this latter phase may also be influenced by successional changes in the global environment. Finally, during the Phase of Ecological Assimilation, the disappearance of the surface geological expression of an impact structure results in a concomitant loss of ecological distinctiveness. In extreme cases, the impact structure is buried. Impact succession displays similarities and differences to succession following other agents of ecological disturbance, particularly volcanism.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Cockell, Charles S.
Lee, Pascal
spellingShingle Cockell, Charles S.
Lee, Pascal
The biology of impact craters: a review
author_facet Cockell, Charles S.
Lee, Pascal
author_sort Cockell, Charles S.
title The biology of impact craters: a review
title_short The biology of impact craters: a review
title_full The biology of impact craters: a review
title_fullStr The biology of impact craters: a review
title_full_unstemmed The biology of impact craters: a review
title_sort biology of impact craters: a review
publishDate 2002
url https://oro.open.ac.uk/4569/
long_lat ENVELOPE(-88.000,-88.000,75.252,75.252)
geographic Nunavut
Canada
Devon Island
geographic_facet Nunavut
Canada
Devon Island
genre Devon Island
Nunavut
genre_facet Devon Island
Nunavut
op_relation Cockell, Charles S. <https://oro.open.ac.uk/view/person/csc235.html> and Lee, Pascal (2002). The biology of impact craters: a review. Biological Reviews, 77(3) pp. 279–310.
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