Santa Fe impact structure

Impact crater in New Mexico From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Santa Fe impact structuremap

The Santa Fe impact structure is an eroded remnant of a bolide impact crater in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains northeast of Santa Fe, New Mexico.[1] The discovery was made in 2005 by a geologist who noticed shatter cones in the rocks in a decades-old road cut on New Mexico State Road 475 between Santa Fe and Hyde Memorial State Park. Shatter cones are a definitive indicator that the rocks had been exposed to a shock of pressures only possible in a meteor impact or a nuclear explosion.[2]

Quick Facts Impact crater/structure, Confidence ...
Santa Fe impact structure
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Shatter cones at the side of Highway 475 in the Santa Fe impact structure
Impact crater/structure
Confidenceconfirmed[1]
Diameter6 kilometres (3.7 mi)-13 kilometres (8.1 mi)
Ageless than 1.2 billion years
Exposedno
Drilledno
Location
LocationSangre de Cristo Mountains
Coordinates35°43′41″N 105°51′51″W
CountryUnited States
StateNew Mexico
DistrictSanta Fe County
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Santa Fe impact structure
Location of Santa Fe impact structure in New Mexico
AccessSR475 northeast of Santa Fe
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It is called an "impact structure" and not a crater because it is so deeply eroded. Current estimates place the age of the impact between 1.4 and 1.6 billion years. Only the crater's basement rocks remain on the surface in the mountains today. The estimated diameter of the original impact crater is 6 to 13 kilometers (4 to 8 mi).[3] The shatter cones occur for about 1 mile (1.6 km) along the highway, which is interpreted to coincide with a central area within a crater of greater diameter.[4][5]

References

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