Spider - Hypervelocity Impact Crater
Alternate Names | |
Local Language | |
Coordinates |
16° 44' 26" S; 126° 5' 26" E Notes
|
Country | Australia |
Region | Western Australia |
Date Confirmed | 1980 Notes
|
Buried? | No |
Drilled? | No |
Target Type |
Sedimentary Notes
|
Sub-Type | Quartziticsandstone |
Apparent Crater Diameter (km) | 13 km |
Age (Ma) | 580 - 900 Notes :
Method :
|
Impactor Type | Unknown |
Advanced Data Fields
Notes
- Apparently exposed at a level considerably below the original crater floor (Harms et al., 1980). Evidence for at least 1 km of denudation in this region (Garvin, 1987, pers. Comm.).
- Diameter is 13 x 11 km and defined by normal faults and monoclines (Abels, 2005). (Shoemaker and Shoemaker, 1985)
- Defined by an outwardly radiating pattern of thrust sheets (ridges) that form a crudely circular pattern. Because of deep erosion, this morphology may represent only the interior of the central uplift (Garvin, 1987, pers. Comm.).
- Shock-twinned zircon and shock-twinned xenotime reported from shatter cones of quartzite by Cox et al. (2021a, 2021b). "
- Nice imags of shatter cones in Cox et al. (2021). Shatter cones in area ~5 km in diameter (Harms et al., 1980). Shatter cones are well-developed in both the central uplift and the surrounding thrust-sheets over an area ~2 km in diameter (Shoemaker and Shoemaker, 1996). Large (~50 cm in length), well-developed, shatter cones occur in quartzite from the central uplift (Shoemaker and Shoemaker, 1996).
- PFand FF in Qz (Cox et al. 2021)
- PDF in quartz grains indexed by U-stage (Cox et al. 2021).
- Polymict impact breccia reported by Cox et al. (2021). Neither crater-fill impactites nor dykes have been identified (Shoemaker and Shoemaker, 1996) (Abels, 2005).
References
(1988) The Spider impact structure, Western Australia, Abstracts with Programs - Geological Society of America 20(7), p. 147, Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO
(2001) Integrated remote sensing of the Spider impact structure, Australia; potential effects of the morphostructural setting on cratering, Abstracts of Papers Submitted to the Lunar and Planetary Science Conference 32, p. Abstract no. 1408, Lunar and Planetary Science Conference, Houston, TX, pdf
(2002) Spider impact structure, Western Australia imaged with space shuttle radar, Abstracts of Papers Submitted to the Lunar and Planetary Science Conference 33, p. Abstract 1990, Lunar and Planetary Science Conference, Houston, TX, pdf
(2005) Spider impact structure, Kimberley Plateau, Western Australia: interpretations of formation mechanism and age based on integrated map-scale data, Australian Journal of Earth Sciences 52(4-5), p. 653-664, url, doi:10.1080/08120090500170310
(2018) The search for shocked zircon at Spider impact structure, Western Australia, Abstracts of Papers Submitted to the 49th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference, p. 1890, pdf
(2019) Spider, Australia, Encyclopedic Atlas of Terrestrial Impact Craters, p. 301-303, Springer, Cham, url, doi:https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-05451-9_77
(2021) Asymmetric shock deformation at the Spider impact structure, Western Australia, Meteoritics & Planetary Science 56(2), p. 331-351, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, url, doi:https://doi.org/10.1111/maps.13621
(2022) Terrestrial impact craters track the voyage of lithospheric plates, Geological Journal 57(9), doi:10.1002/gj.4512