At 2.2 Billion Years Old, This is the Oldest Impact Crater on Earth

Around 2.2 billion years ago, a massive space rock collided against our planet, leaving a massive scar.

Around 200 million years older than any other site like it on the planet’s surface, the so-called Yarrabubba impact structure is located in Australia.

Although the impact site is the oldest found to date, finding it was not easy.

Our planet’s surface is continually changing due to tectonic activity and erosion, making it very difficult to date ancient impact craters.

This is precisely the case of the 70 km-wide Yarrabubba crater in Western Australia, which lacked a precise age but was nonetheless considered one of the oldest on our planet.

In a study published on January 21 in Nature Communications, the researchers revealed studying the massive impact site. Although today not much of it is visible, what lies inside it holds invaluable information about the crater and its age. At the center of the impact, the crater is a small, red hill dubbed Barlangi Hill.

“[Barlangi Hill] has been interpreted as an impact-generated melt rock,” the researchers wrote in the study.

The researchers analyzed minerals crystallized by the impact. They performed an isotopic analysis – to understand the chemical reactions – of the zircon and monazite minerals to obtain the precise age.

The impact crater

A view of the Yarrabubba impact crater: Image Credit: The Conversation.

Consequently, using a uranium-lead dating technique, the scientists discovered that the Yarrabubba impact crater is 200 million years older than the next oldest recognized impact crater, the Vredefort crater in South Africa.

If the impact crater’s dating is accurate, it means that the collision of the massive space rocks coincided with the end of a prehistoric ice age when most of our planet was frozen.

The researchers created many models that allowed them to study the possible effects of a massive asteroid impact, the possible effects it would have on an ice sheet, and how it would modify the planet’s climate.

If an asteroid really did impact a continent’s ice sheet, it likely kicked up massive amounts of rock, ash, dust, similar to a volcanic eruption.

Computer simulations have shown an impact like that would have spread between 87 trillion and 5,000 trillion kilograms of water vapor into the planet’s atmosphere. This most likely caused the ice sheet to melt since water is an efficient greenhouse gas.

“If the impact occurred into an ice sheet then it would release lots of water vapor, which is an even more efficient greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide,” lead study author Timmons Erickson, of NASA’s Johnson Space Center, explained in an interview with the AFP.

“That, in turn, may result in warming of the planet.”

However, the above is just one possible scenario, and the exact conditions are still heatedly debated. Whatever the case, impact-craters like Yarrabubba are of great importance to scientists, offering valuable data and insight on what our planet looked like billions of years ago.

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