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Phobos, moon of Mars

It ’ s a tough neighbourhood out there…. Phobos, moon of Mars. Mercury. Moon. Moon. Can see pathways of ejecta… (false color to highlight). Moon up close from Apollo where would you land?. Venus. Mars. Earth ’ s Moon (S. Pole). Mercury. Earth looks a little different!.

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Phobos, moon of Mars

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  1. It’s a tough neighbourhood out there…. Phobos, moon of Mars

  2. Mercury

  3. Moon

  4. Moon Can see pathways of ejecta… (false color to highlight)

  5. Moon up close from Apollo where would you land?

  6. Venus Mars Earth’s Moon (S. Pole) Mercury

  7. Earth looks a little different!

  8. But there are known impact sites Why in these locations?

  9. Russian meteor from 15th February, 2013 10,000 tonnes, 17-20 m diameter, 18.6 km/s (67,000 km/h) 500 ktonnes of TNT (2100TJ) (Hiroshima 12.5kt TNT)) Shockwave hit Chelyabinsk 2.5 minutes later, and injured 1500 people, Shockwave recorded in Antarctica (went twice round the world) 16hrs later a 30m asteroid (2012 DA14) passed within 17,000 m of Earth.

  10. Ann Hodges was napping on her living room couch on Nov. 30, 1954, when a meteoroid crashed through the ceiling and smashed her radio. It struck her on the arm and hip, leaving her bruised but able to walk. The meteor, it turned out, had made a fireball visible from three states as it descended on her Sylacauga, Ala., home. It’s now on display at the University of Alabama — it’s about the size of a grapefruit and weighs 12 pounds.

  11. Tunguska Event, 1908, Russia 80 million trees knocked down over 2,150 square kilometres (830 square miles

  12. Tunguska Event 1908 Equivalent to a 100 MT Nuclear Bomb Blast (Hiroshima = 12.5 kt; all of WWII = 3 MT)

  13. One known(ish) fatality A manuscript published at Tortona, Italy, in 1677 tells of a Milanese friar who was killed by a meteorite: “All the other monks of the convent of St. Mary hastened up to him who had been struck, as well from curiosity as from pity, and among them was also the Canon Manfredo Settala. They all carefully examined the corpse, to discover the most secret and decisive effects of the shock which had struck him; they found it was on one of the thighs, where they perceived a wound blackened either by the gangrene or by the action of the fire. Impelled by curiosity, they enlarged the aperture to examine the interior of it; they saw that it penetrated to the bone, and were much surprised to find at the bottom of the wound a roundish stone which had made it, and had killed this monk in a manner equally terrible and unexpected.”

  14. Mistastan Lake, New Foundland, Canada 28 Km 38,000 years All diameters are for the crater (not the impactor)

  15. Barringer Meteor Crater, AZ 1.18 km 49,000 years (thought to be ~50m asteroid)

  16. Wolf Creek, Australia 0.875 Km 300,000 years

  17. Bosumtwi, Nigeria 10.5 Km 1.3 Million years

  18. Roter, South Africa 2.5 km 5 Million years

  19. Karakul, Tadjikistan 45 Km < 10 Ma

  20. Chicxulub, Mex 170 Km 65 Ma Sufficient to penetrate the crust: Maximum Cavity Depth ~1/3 of diameter of crater

  21. Deep Bay, Sask. 13 km 100 Million years Clearwater Lakes, Sask. 32 km/22km 290 Million years (double impact)

  22. Gosses Bluss, Australia 22 km 142.5 Million years

  23. Aorounga, Chad 17 km 200 Million years Note concentric rings – various theories

  24. Aorounga, Chad 17 km 200 Million years

  25. Manicougan Lake, Quebec 100 km 212 Million years

  26. Formation of the moon? Collision of Earth + Mars-sized object (re-touched somewhat)

  27. Radar Image of NEO 1999JM8 Missed Earth by 5 million km in 1990, 6 million km in 1999 Average diameter 3.5 km

  28. Typical menacing rocky asteroid (comets also have ice in them, and tails)

  29. Cratering over time in inner Solar system Calculated from counting moon craters , and dating From Apollo samples Heavy early bombardment then significant reduction

  30. How often do these things happen? Note power law relationship If S = size of blast, f = frequency Plots as a straight line on log-log axes (note reversed x-axis above)

  31. What is wrong here?

  32. Apollo 14 site spherules (~ 0.2 mm diameter) Argon40/Argon39 dates (accuracy ~ +/- 200 MY) Glass spherules created at time of impact-dated from decay of Argon Why the recent increase in the last 500Ma?

  33. Knock something out of the Oort Cloud, and we might be in trouble…

  34. Apollo 14 site spherules (~ 200 micro-meters diameter) Argon40/Argon39 dates (accuracy ~ +/- 200 MY) • 26 Ma periodicity (dodgy) • Claim is that extinctions happen with that periodicity?...

  35. Is nemesis out there?

  36. A couple of slides back it looked light an upsurge in impacts recently, But it depends on how you process the data… 1 BY averaging bins Black and opaque spherules only (the ones most definitely related to impacts)

  37. Question: If cratering rate on Earth is same as our Moon, why are their so few craters preserved? Answer: Erosion

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