Impact melt rocks from the Late Paleocene Hiawatha impact structure, northwest Greenland

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Impact melt rocks from the Late Paleocene Hiawatha impact structure, northwest Greenland. / Hyde, William R.; Garde, Adam A.; Keulen, Nynke; Malkki, Sebastian N.; Jaret, Steven J.; Waight, Tod; Beck, Pierre; McDonald, Iain; Larsen, Nicolaj K.

In: Meteoritics and Planetary Science, Vol. 58, No. 6, 2023, p. 789-814.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Hyde, WR, Garde, AA, Keulen, N, Malkki, SN, Jaret, SJ, Waight, T, Beck, P, McDonald, I & Larsen, NK 2023, 'Impact melt rocks from the Late Paleocene Hiawatha impact structure, northwest Greenland', Meteoritics and Planetary Science, vol. 58, no. 6, pp. 789-814. https://doi.org/10.1111/maps.13987

APA

Hyde, W. R., Garde, A. A., Keulen, N., Malkki, S. N., Jaret, S. J., Waight, T., Beck, P., McDonald, I., & Larsen, N. K. (2023). Impact melt rocks from the Late Paleocene Hiawatha impact structure, northwest Greenland. Meteoritics and Planetary Science, 58(6), 789-814. https://doi.org/10.1111/maps.13987

Vancouver

Hyde WR, Garde AA, Keulen N, Malkki SN, Jaret SJ, Waight T et al. Impact melt rocks from the Late Paleocene Hiawatha impact structure, northwest Greenland. Meteoritics and Planetary Science. 2023;58(6):789-814. https://doi.org/10.1111/maps.13987

Author

Hyde, William R. ; Garde, Adam A. ; Keulen, Nynke ; Malkki, Sebastian N. ; Jaret, Steven J. ; Waight, Tod ; Beck, Pierre ; McDonald, Iain ; Larsen, Nicolaj K. / Impact melt rocks from the Late Paleocene Hiawatha impact structure, northwest Greenland. In: Meteoritics and Planetary Science. 2023 ; Vol. 58, No. 6. pp. 789-814.

Bibtex

@article{ea5ae08ebe8d4263a66a0c4ccb4bf960,
title = "Impact melt rocks from the Late Paleocene Hiawatha impact structure, northwest Greenland",
abstract = "Impact melt rocks formed during hypervelocity impact events are ideal for studying impact structures. Here, we describe impact melt rock samples collected proximal to the 31 km wide 58 Ma Hiawatha impact structure, northwest Greenland, which is completely covered by the Greenland Ice Sheet. The melt rocks contain diagnostic shock indicators (e.g., planar deformation features [PDF] in quartz and shocked zircon) and form three groups based on melt textures and chemistry: (i) hypocrystalline, (ii) glassy, and (iii) carbonate-based melt rocks. The exposed foreland directly in front of the structure consists of metasedimentary successions and igneous plutons; however, the carbonate-based impactites indicate a mixed target sequence with a significant carbonate-rich component. Well-preserved organic material in some melt rocks indicates that North Greenland at the time of impact was host to abundant organic material, likely a dense high-latitude temperate forest. Geochemical signatures of platinum-group elements in selected samples indicate an extraterrestrial component and support previous identification of a highly fractionated iron impactor in glaciofluvial sand. Our results illustrate the possibility to study impact structures hidden beneath a thick ice sheet based on transported samples and this opens a new avenue for identifying other potential impact craters in Greenland and Antarctica.",
author = "Hyde, {William R.} and Garde, {Adam A.} and Nynke Keulen and Malkki, {Sebastian N.} and Jaret, {Steven J.} and Tod Waight and Pierre Beck and Iain McDonald and Larsen, {Nicolaj K.}",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1111/maps.13987",
language = "English",
volume = "58",
pages = "789--814",
journal = "Meteoritics and Planetary Science",
issn = "1086-9379",
publisher = "JohnWiley & Sons, Inc.",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Impact melt rocks from the Late Paleocene Hiawatha impact structure, northwest Greenland

AU - Hyde, William R.

AU - Garde, Adam A.

AU - Keulen, Nynke

AU - Malkki, Sebastian N.

AU - Jaret, Steven J.

AU - Waight, Tod

AU - Beck, Pierre

AU - McDonald, Iain

AU - Larsen, Nicolaj K.

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Impact melt rocks formed during hypervelocity impact events are ideal for studying impact structures. Here, we describe impact melt rock samples collected proximal to the 31 km wide 58 Ma Hiawatha impact structure, northwest Greenland, which is completely covered by the Greenland Ice Sheet. The melt rocks contain diagnostic shock indicators (e.g., planar deformation features [PDF] in quartz and shocked zircon) and form three groups based on melt textures and chemistry: (i) hypocrystalline, (ii) glassy, and (iii) carbonate-based melt rocks. The exposed foreland directly in front of the structure consists of metasedimentary successions and igneous plutons; however, the carbonate-based impactites indicate a mixed target sequence with a significant carbonate-rich component. Well-preserved organic material in some melt rocks indicates that North Greenland at the time of impact was host to abundant organic material, likely a dense high-latitude temperate forest. Geochemical signatures of platinum-group elements in selected samples indicate an extraterrestrial component and support previous identification of a highly fractionated iron impactor in glaciofluvial sand. Our results illustrate the possibility to study impact structures hidden beneath a thick ice sheet based on transported samples and this opens a new avenue for identifying other potential impact craters in Greenland and Antarctica.

AB - Impact melt rocks formed during hypervelocity impact events are ideal for studying impact structures. Here, we describe impact melt rock samples collected proximal to the 31 km wide 58 Ma Hiawatha impact structure, northwest Greenland, which is completely covered by the Greenland Ice Sheet. The melt rocks contain diagnostic shock indicators (e.g., planar deformation features [PDF] in quartz and shocked zircon) and form three groups based on melt textures and chemistry: (i) hypocrystalline, (ii) glassy, and (iii) carbonate-based melt rocks. The exposed foreland directly in front of the structure consists of metasedimentary successions and igneous plutons; however, the carbonate-based impactites indicate a mixed target sequence with a significant carbonate-rich component. Well-preserved organic material in some melt rocks indicates that North Greenland at the time of impact was host to abundant organic material, likely a dense high-latitude temperate forest. Geochemical signatures of platinum-group elements in selected samples indicate an extraterrestrial component and support previous identification of a highly fractionated iron impactor in glaciofluvial sand. Our results illustrate the possibility to study impact structures hidden beneath a thick ice sheet based on transported samples and this opens a new avenue for identifying other potential impact craters in Greenland and Antarctica.

U2 - 10.1111/maps.13987

DO - 10.1111/maps.13987

M3 - Journal article

VL - 58

SP - 789

EP - 814

JO - Meteoritics and Planetary Science

JF - Meteoritics and Planetary Science

SN - 1086-9379

IS - 6

ER -

ID: 347307008