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Meteorite impacts

Meteorite impacts. Comparative energies. No human in past 1,000 years has been killed by a meteorite. Direct observations of meteorite impacts. Tunguska, Siberia, 30 June 1908…a big bang above the Earth’s surface Shoemaker-Levy 9, July 1994…impacts hitting Jupiter.

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Meteorite impacts

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  1. Meteorite impacts

  2. Comparative energies No human in past 1,000 years has been killed by a meteorite

  3. Direct observations of meteorite impacts • Tunguska, Siberia, 30 June 1908…a big bang above the Earth’s surface • Shoemaker-Levy 9, July 1994…impacts hitting Jupiter

  4. Direct observations of meteorite impacts • In 1954, a 5-kg meteorite crashed through a house in Alabama • the object bounced off a radio and hit the owner in the head

  5. Effects upon children

  6. Indirect evidence of meteorite impacts • Preserved craters on the continents, mainly the oldest parts (shields) • Lac cratére in northern Québec is a simple crater… • …its rim diameter is 3.4 km, it is 250 m deep, and it is 1.4 Ma in age

  7. Location map of some impact craters seen at the surface

  8. Lac cratère

  9. Meteor crater in Arizona is another simple crater showing rim ejecta

  10. Manicouagan • The Manicouagan crater in Québec is a spectacular example of a complex crater • Its original rim has been removed by erosion…the current diameter is 100 km • It has an uplifted central core and outer rings, which are filled by a lake • Its age - 210 Ma - coincides approximately with a large extinction at the end of the Triassic period

  11. Manicouagan St. Lawrence River

  12. Central uplift

  13. Asteroids and the Asteroid Belt • The Asteroid Belt lies between Mars and Jupiter…there are about 4,000 objects • As asteroids collide with one another, they fragment and send pieces into near-Earth orbits

  14. Asteroids • Asteroids are rocky fragments (diameter 10m to 1000 km) which either: • failed to consolidate into a planet, or • represent remnants of a fragmented planet

  15. Asteroids • Metallic: some stony types are strong and hard and may hit the Earth. • Weak, friable types likely will explode in the atmosphere at high altitudes.

  16. Comets • Comets come from the far reaches of the Solar System (outer solar system, kuiper Belt and in the Oort Cloud). • They mainly consist of frozen water, carbon dioxide, or both with admixed small rock fragments and dust, thus are referred to as “dirty icebergs” or “dirty snowballs” • They have highly elongate, elliptical orbits which bring them close to the Sun

  17. Comets • The tail of the comet is produced as ices melt and gases and dust particles are shed from the object. • Generally explode in the atmosphere at high altitudes.

  18. Comet West, 9 March 1976

  19. Comet P/Shoemaker-Levy 9, July 1994 • This comet was first detected on 24 March 1993 • It was broken apart by a close pass to Jupiter on 7 July 1992 Hubble image, 1 July 1993

  20. The sequence of events • The collision of the comet with Jupiter occurred over several days, 16-22 July 1994 • It was the first collision of 2 solar system bodies ever observed • At least 20 fragments hit Jupiter at speeds of 60 km/second

  21. Energies • Fragment A struck with energy equivalent to 225,000 megatons of TNT, the plume rising to 1000 km • Fragment G was the biggie, with 6,000,000 megatons TNT energy and a plume rising to 3,000 km • Fragment G (and K, L) created dark impact sites whose diameters were at least that of Earth’s radius

  22. Other definitions • Meteor: light through the sky. Most meteors are destroyed in Earth’s atmosphere. • Meteoroid: matter revolving around the Sun or any object in planetary space too small to be called an asteroid or a comet • Meteorite: a meteoroid which reaches the surface of the Earth without being vaporized

  23. Stony meteorites (94% of all meteorites) • Two types: • Chondrites…contain chondrules…they are very old and primitive • Achondrites…no chondrules Photo of a carbonaceous chondrite (carbon-bearing)

  24. Types of meteorites derived from asteroids • Achondrites have a metallic core and stony silicate mantle • As asteroids fragment, both metallic and silicate pieces are produced Metallic core Stony silicate mantle

  25. Iron meteorites • These consist of nearly pure metallic nickel and iron • This photo shows an iron meteorite named ARISPE

  26. Stony-iron meteorites • These are a mixture of the previous two types • Often they are fragmental, suggestive of violent processes • This stony-iron meteorite is named ESTHER

  27. Impact events • 1. Probabilities • 2. Nature of the event • 3. Consequences • 4. Mitigation

  28. 1. Probabilities of a collision • What are the chances of a large meteorite hitting Earth? • As of 2003, ~700 objects with diameters > 1 km known to have orbits which intersect that of Earth • And 30 new objects are discovered each year, with the search only 8% complete!

  29. Probabilities - Zebrowski • Zebrowski shows that, on average, collisions of 1 km-diameter objects occur every 250,000 years • Such an impact is sufficient to wipe out most of the human population From Zebrowski (1997)

  30. Probabilities - Courtillot • Is Zebrowski’s estimate too high? Courtillot suggests it is about 1 Ma between events • In any case, you can see that these events are both very rare and very destructive From Courtillot (1999)

  31. 2. Nature of the event • Impact cratering is an important process in the history of Earth and other planets • 107 to 109 kg of meteoritic flux strikes Earth each year, mostly in the form of dust

  32. Impact events • The cratering process is very rapid • Since the objects travel so fast (4-40 km/second), a huge amount of energy is transferred upon impact

  33. Cratering • A blanket of ejecta is dispersed around the crater • rock is fractured, crushed, and broken • In large impact events, the rock can even be vaporized (depending on the type of rock)

  34. Cratering (continued) • Very high pressures are reached, resulting in shock metamorphism (pressure-temperature increases) • After the initial compression comes decompression, which may cause the rock to melt

  35. Broken rock Ejecta blanket fracturing Simple craters are basically simple bowls With time, the ejecta blanket outside the crater is eroded

  36. melt Central uplift Complex craters are generated by rebound of the central core This core, as it decompresses, may melt

  37. There are about 200 large, well-preserved impact craters worldwide…BUT…>>200 impact events during Earth’s history This map shows both SURFACE and SUB-SURFACE examples

  38. Consequences of a large impact event • These would apply for an object of about 1 km or larger • Actually, you may not want to hear the list of death and destruction (or maybe you do)...

  39. Consequences 1 • A base surge, similar to a volcanic pyroclastic flow, will be generated by the impact • For a terrestrial impact, rock will be pulverized and/or vaporized, sending up huge amounts of dust into the stratosphere

  40. Consequences 2 • For an oceanic impact: • huge amounts of water will be vaporized • Global tsunamis will be generated, which will ravage the Earth’s coastlines

  41. Consequences 3 • In the short term, global wildfires will be generated by the impact event • These fires will burn uncontrollably across the globe, sending more soot, dust, and gas into the stratosphere

  42. Consequences 4 • All this suspended dust and soot will cause global winter and global darkness • Acid rains will fall • Crops will fail catastrophically • The end result will be MASS EXTINCTIONS

  43. Consequences 5 • One last interesting point: • The impact likely will trigger devastating quakes around the globe, especially where tectonic stresses are high (i.e., plate margins) • Volcanism (flood basalts) may occur on the opposite side of the globe from the impact, as a result of shock waves travelling through the center of the Earth

  44. From Murck et al. (1996)

  45. Mitigation • The problem is the possibility of little or no warning • There are proposals to use nuclear weapons and satellites to “shoot down” or destroy such killer objects • For further edification, rent “Armegeddon” from Blockbuster (1998) • Good subject for a paper !

  46. Two case studies • Tunguska 1908, Russia • The Cretaceous-Tertiary extinction, 65 Ma

  47. Tunguska, Russia, 30 June 1908 • Something big seems to have exploded in the atmosphere • The exact cause is uncertain, but we suspect a comet or a meteor Aerial view of Tunguska Natural Reserve

  48. What happened? • The object’s entry appeared to be at an angle of 30-35° • The object shattered in a series of explosions at about 8 km altitude Tree blowdown from the explosions; Note parallel alignment of the trees

  49. Big fires • In the central region, forests flashed to fires which burned for weeks • a herd of 600-700 reindeer was incinerated

  50. Aligned trees • Trees were felled in a radial sense • About 2,000 km2 were flattened by the blasts

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