Intercontinental correlation of distal Archean impact ejecta layers can be used to help create a global time-stratigraphic framework for early Earth events. For example, an impact spherule layer in the Neoarchean Monteville Formation (Griqualand West Basin, South Africa) may be correlated with layers in one or more formations in Western Australia. To help assess the degree to which diagenetic alteration would hinder such correlations, we performed a petrographic study of spherules in the Monteville layer. Most of the spherules in the Monteville layer have botryoidal rims composed of radial-fibrous K-feldspar, but compaction and replacement have greatly altered their appearance and mineralogy. Moreover, the Monteville spherule layer consists...
Sand-sized spherules up to 1.7 mm across with spherulitic, vesicular, and other crystalline textures...
Sand-size spherules of former silicate melt have been identified in ~10 thin Early Archean to Paleop...
The record of terrestrial meteorite impacts is fragmentary because most impact structures and ejecta...
Spherule layers constitute the only trace of impacts by large extraterrestrial bodies in the early P...
Well-studied successions in the Griqualand West Basin (South Africa) and the Hamersley Basin (Wester...
A Late Archean layer rich in sand-sized spherules of former silicate melt in the Monteville Formatio...
Previously, two layers containing impact melt spherules, the Wittenoom spherule layer and the Carawi...
Individual layers rich in sand-sized spherules interpreted as distal ejecta from Late Archaean to Ea...
The Wittenoom Formation (Hamersley Group, Western Australia) is a well-preserved Neoarchaean unit de...
Thin layers rich in spherules formed during impacts by large extraterrestrial objects have the poten...
Predominantly sand-sized spherules of K-feldspar with spherulitic, vesicular, and other crystalline ...
Thin layers rich in spherules formed during impacts by large extraterrestrial objects have the poten...
A large extraterrestrial object striking Earth at cosmic velocity melts and vaporizes silicate mater...
We report the discovery of the Paraburdoo spherule layer, which consists entirely of replaced impact...
Impact ejecta (about 2.5 Gyr old) in the DS4 layer of the Dales Gorge BIF (Hamersley Group, Western ...
Sand-sized spherules up to 1.7 mm across with spherulitic, vesicular, and other crystalline textures...
Sand-size spherules of former silicate melt have been identified in ~10 thin Early Archean to Paleop...
The record of terrestrial meteorite impacts is fragmentary because most impact structures and ejecta...
Spherule layers constitute the only trace of impacts by large extraterrestrial bodies in the early P...
Well-studied successions in the Griqualand West Basin (South Africa) and the Hamersley Basin (Wester...
A Late Archean layer rich in sand-sized spherules of former silicate melt in the Monteville Formatio...
Previously, two layers containing impact melt spherules, the Wittenoom spherule layer and the Carawi...
Individual layers rich in sand-sized spherules interpreted as distal ejecta from Late Archaean to Ea...
The Wittenoom Formation (Hamersley Group, Western Australia) is a well-preserved Neoarchaean unit de...
Thin layers rich in spherules formed during impacts by large extraterrestrial objects have the poten...
Predominantly sand-sized spherules of K-feldspar with spherulitic, vesicular, and other crystalline ...
Thin layers rich in spherules formed during impacts by large extraterrestrial objects have the poten...
A large extraterrestrial object striking Earth at cosmic velocity melts and vaporizes silicate mater...
We report the discovery of the Paraburdoo spherule layer, which consists entirely of replaced impact...
Impact ejecta (about 2.5 Gyr old) in the DS4 layer of the Dales Gorge BIF (Hamersley Group, Western ...
Sand-sized spherules up to 1.7 mm across with spherulitic, vesicular, and other crystalline textures...
Sand-size spherules of former silicate melt have been identified in ~10 thin Early Archean to Paleop...
The record of terrestrial meteorite impacts is fragmentary because most impact structures and ejecta...