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Probing the hydrothermal system of the Chicxulub impact crater.


ABSTRACT: The ~180-km-diameter Chicxulub peak-ring crater and ~240-km multiring basin, produced by the impact that terminated the Cretaceous, is the largest remaining intact impact basin on Earth. International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) and International Continental Scientific Drilling Program (ICDP) Expedition 364 drilled to a depth of 1335 m below the sea floor into the peak ring, providing a unique opportunity to study the thermal and chemical modification of Earth's crust caused by the impact. The recovered core shows the crater hosted a spatially extensive hydrothermal system that chemically and mineralogically modified ~1.4 × 105 km3 of Earth's crust, a volume more than nine times that of the Yellowstone Caldera system. Initially, high temperatures of 300° to 400°C and an independent geomagnetic polarity clock indicate the hydrothermal system was long lived, in excess of 106 years.

SUBMITTER: Kring DA 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7259942 | biostudies-literature | 2020 May

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Probing the hydrothermal system of the Chicxulub impact crater.

Kring David A DA   Tikoo Sonia M SM   Schmieder Martin M   Riller Ulrich U   Rebolledo-Vieyra Mario M   Simpson Sarah L SL   Osinski Gordon R GR   Gattacceca Jérôme J   Wittmann Axel A   Verhagen Christina M CM   Cockell Charles S CS   Coolen Marco J L MJL   Longstaffe Fred J FJ   Gulick Sean P S SPS   Morgan Joanna V JV   Bralower Timothy J TJ   Chenot Elise E   Christeson Gail L GL   Claeys Philippe P   Ferrière Ludovic L   Gebhardt Catalina C   Goto Kazuhisa K   Green Sophie L SL   Jones Heather H   Lofi Johanna J   Lowery Christopher M CM   Ocampo-Torres Rubén R   Perez-Cruz Ligia L   Pickersgill Annemarie E AE   Poelchau Michael H MH   Rae Auriol S P ASP   Rasmussen Cornelia C   Sato Honami H   Smit Jan J   Tomioka Naotaka N   Urrutia-Fucugauchi Jaime J   Whalen Michael T MT   Xiao Long L   Yamaguchi Kosei E KE  

Science advances 20200529 22


The ~180-km-diameter Chicxulub peak-ring crater and ~240-km multiring basin, produced by the impact that terminated the Cretaceous, is the largest remaining intact impact basin on Earth. International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) and International Continental Scientific Drilling Program (ICDP) Expedition 364 drilled to a depth of 1335 m below the sea floor into the peak ring, providing a unique opportunity to study the thermal and chemical modification of Earth's crust caused by the impact. Th  ...[more]

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