About 50,000 years ago, a rock fragment broke away from the asteroid belt and hurtled towards earth. The rock, composed of nickel and iron, was about 50 meters across and weighed 300,000 tons. It was travelling at 12.8 kilometers per second. Upon entering the earth’s atmosphere it became a giant fireball that streaked across the North American sky. When it crashed into the plains of Arizona, it exploded with a force equal to 10 megatons or about 150 times the force of the atomic bomb that destroyed Hiroshima.
The violence of the impact vaporized the meteorite leaving little residue, but millions of tons of limestone and sandstone were blasted out covering the ground for a mile in every direction. When the dust settled, what remained was a crater over a kilometer across and 750 feet deep. The impact occurred during the last ice age, a time when the Arizona landscape was cooler and wetter. The area was an open grassland dotted with woodlands inhabited by woolly mammoths and giant ground sloths. The force of the impact leveled the forest for miles around, hurling the mammoths across the plain and killing or severely injuring any animals unfortunate enough to be nearby.
As the landscape recovered, a lake formed in the bottom of the crater, and sediments accumulated until the bowl was only 550 feet deep. When the ice age ended, the climate changed and dried, preserving the crater from further erosion.
The crater has been named the Barringer Crater in honor of Daniel Barringer, who was first to suggest that it was produced by meteorite impact. It is also referred to simply as "Meteor Crater". The crater is located approximately 69 km east of Flagstaff, near Winslow in the northern Arizona desert of the United States. It is the largest impact crater yet discovered in the United States, and one of the best preserved on earth. Today the crater is about 1,200 meters in diameter, some 170 meters deep and is surrounded by a rim that rises 45 meter above the surrounding plains.
The origin of this crater has been a source of controversy for many years. Initially, the scientist community believed that such a crater cannot exist arguing that all natural landforms had been created slowly, over thousands or even millions of years, rather than in a single catastrophic moment.
Barringer, a mining engineer and businessman, was one of the first people to claim that the crater was the result of an impact, contradicting the most eminent scientists of his time. He was convinced that an iron-nickel core over 10 million tons lay beneath the floor of the crater, and in 1928, raised $200,000 from an investor promising a profit of $250 million on a mere half million dollar investment. But when the mine shaft hit nothing but water, an astronomer was consulted for his opinion on the size of the meteorite.
The astronomer F. R. Moulton calculated that the size of the meteorite to be 300,000 tons, or only 3% of the amount claimed by Barringer, and too small to justify any further drilling. In addition, Moulton argued that the energy of the impact would have resulted in the total vaporization of the meteorite itself.
Work on the mine was halted. Barringer lost nearly all of his own fortune, along with hundreds of thousands entrusted to him by his investors. Devastated by the loss, Daniel Barringer died of a massive heart attack on November 30, 1929.
It was not until 1960 that later research by Eugene Merle Shoemaker confirmed Barringer's hypothesis. The key discovery was the presence in the crater of the minerals coesite and stishovite, rare forms of silica found only where quartz-bearing rocks have been severely shocked by an instantaneous overpressure. It cannot be created by volcanic action; the only known mechanism of creating it is through an impact event.
Shoemaker's discovery is considered the first definitive proof of an extraterrestrial impact on the Earth's surface. Since then, numerous impact craters have been identified around the world, though Meteor Crater remains one of the most visually impressive owing to its size, young age, and lack of vegetative cover.
Meteor Crater is today a popular tourist attraction privately owned by the Barringer family through the Barringer Crater Company. There is a Visitor Center on the north rim that features interactive exhibits and displays about meteorites and asteroids, space, the solar system and comets. It also features a 1,406 pound meteorite found in the area, and meteorite specimens from Meteor Crater that can be touched.
Barringer Crater official website
The largest fragment discovered from the meteorite that formed Meteor Crater, exhibited at the tourist center in Meteor Crater, Flagstaff, Arizona. Photo credit
Barringer Crater - $16 per person
ReplyDeleteGrand canyon national Park - $25 a car load (7 day pass)
We planned to see the crater on our way to the canyon but it cost too much ($80 for the 5 of us). Grand canyon national Park is a bigger, better hole in the ground.
I remember going as a kid. It was pretty underwhelming. It doesn't have the interesting formations and contours like the Grand Canyon (for obvious reasons.) Once you've been there for 10 minutes, you've seen all there is to see.
Deleteit's amazing, you should make an article about chicxulub crater, it is located at the Peninsula de Yucatán in Mexico. There are some theories about the relation of it and dinosaurs massive extintion
ReplyDeleteChicxulub Crater is all but invisible after over 65 million years.
DeleteBarringer Crater is MUCH more impressive to lay people.
Meteor, people love to talked about this, but not many know about the fact.. Good article..
ReplyDeleteNOT the largest impact crater in the U.S. According to wikipedia the biggest one is in my backyard:
ReplyDeletehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chesapeake_Bay_impact_crater
The owners of the crater should do a cost study. Our group of 7 decided not to pay the exorbitant price, and won't be recommending a stop to our daughter and her family when they drive past to come visit us. We had 15 minutes to spare on our drive from NM to UT and couldn't justify paying that much for only 15 minutes. Perhaps if the price was cut in half, more people would stop and the goodwill generated from that would bring in more customers.
ReplyDeleteBarringer Crater was pretty awesome. Being from S.C., I don't ordinarily see something as spectacular as this. The admission price is worth it.
ReplyDeletewe would like to see it - we live by the ocean in Miami
ReplyDeleteHow exactly does someone own a crater and can charge others to view it? Really stupid.
ReplyDeleteIsnt that the one in "hills have eyes"?
ReplyDelete