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Tennessee Crater Inches Toward Recognition

tetrahedrassface writes "Slashdot carried the story of an-as-yet unverified impact crater in Tennessee a couple of years ago. After a few weeks of fairly hardcore sample taking, digging, obtaining some good images and manipulating them, I'm proud to report the first batch of evidence in favor of it being an impact site. The primary smoking gun is the presentation of an astrobleme, obtained from High Resolution Ornithographic Images taken in 2008. Also of note are the melted/deformed rocks, magnetic crater dust, and the fitment of the crater rim to a circle. A rented plane and a bunch of photographs today and it's pretty obvious that it's a crater, folks. Cheers!"

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  1. Megabar Shocked Material = Smoking Gun by crunchygranola · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "A rented plane and a bunch of photographs today and it's pretty obvious that it's a crater, folks."

    Only if "crater" means "circular depression". Sinkholes make nice circular depressions also, and are far from rare in the South. And the summary misuses the term "astrobleme" which means "cosmic impact crater" and would be the whole circular structure. I gather the poster is referring to an elevated region in the center which may be an impact rebound peak.

    Melted rock and magnetic dust makes the case stronger (but ancient volcanism could account for at least the melted rock), but the real smoking gun that would make the case without any doubt would be coesite or stishovite (for example), quartz that has been transformed by megabar (millions of atmospheres) of pressure. These materials (or other evidence of extremely intense shock waves such as characteristic microfractures) are virtual proof of a cosmic impact.

    --
    Second class citizen of the New Gilded Age