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The age of Wolfe Creek meteorite crater (Kandimalal), Western Australia

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posted on 2024-11-15, 01:37 authored by Timothy BarrowsTimothy Barrows, John Magee, Gifford H Miller, L Keith Fifield
Wolfe Creek crater lies in northwestern Australia at the edge of the Great Sandy Desert. Together with Meteor Crater, it is one of the two largest craters on Earth from which meteorite fragments have been recovered. The age of the impact is poorly constrained and unpublished data places the event at about 300,000 years ago. In comparison, Meteor Crater is well constrained by exposure dating. In this paper, we present new ages for Wolfe Creek Crater from exposure dating using the cosmogenic nuclides 10Be and 26Al, together with optically stimulated luminescence ages (OSL) on sand from a site created by the impact. We also present a new topographic survey of the crater using photogrammetry. The exposure ages range from ~86 to 128 ka. The OSL ages indicate that the age of the impact is most likely to be ~120 ka with a maximum age of 137 ka. Considering the geomorphic setting, the most likely age of the crater is 120 ± 9 ka. Last, we review the age of Meteor Crater in Arizona. Changes in production rates and scaling factors since the original dating work revise the impact age to 61.1 ± 4.8 ka, or ~20% older than previously reported.

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Citation

Barrows, T. T., Magee, J., Miller, G. & Fifield, L. (2019). The age of Wolfe Creek meteorite crater (Kandimalal), Western Australia. Meteoritics and Planetary Science, Online First 1-12.

Journal title

Meteoritics and Planetary Science

Volume

54

Issue

11

Pagination

2686-2697

Language

English

RIS ID

138668

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