Meteorite impact: the danger from space and South Africa's mega-impact The Vrederfort Dome

Meteorite impact: the danger from space and South Africa's mega-impact The Vrederfort Dome

Reimold, W.Uwe
Gibson, Roger L.

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The impact of large extraterrestrial bolides (asteroids and comets) with Earth is an ever-present danger that humanity has only recently begun to recognise. Of the 175 impact craters found thus far on Earth, three giants stand out – Chicxulub in Mexico, Sudbury in Canada, and the Vredefort Impact Structure in South Africa. Each of these impact events catastrophically altered the global environment and was strong enough to drastically change life on our planet. The Vredefort Structure is the oldest and largest of these three giants and at about 300 km diameter it is nearly twice the size of the Chicxulub crater that was formed by an impact that wiped out approximately 75% of all known life on Earth 65 million years ago. In the more than 2000 million years since its formation, water, wind and ice have slowly eroded away the original Vredefort crater, exposing its roots in a series of spectacular rocks. The outcroppings in the region around the towns of Vredefort and Parys, known as the Vredefort Dome, show the scars of the cataclysmic forces that accompanied the impact event. The rocks, ripped from the depths of the crust by the impact, also tell a far older story that stretches back to more than 3500 million years ago, when the first continents formed on the primitive Earth, and to the time when fabulous gold deposits accumulated on the margins of the ancient Witwatersrand sea. TheVredefort Structure is truly one of the geological wonders of the world. While the rocks of the Vredefort Dome, and the story they have to tell, lie at theheart of this book, it is by no means the full story. The Dome is an area of spectacular scenic beauty and biodiversity, dominated by 40 kilometre-wide crescent of hills incised by the Vaal River and its tributaries. This area has also been home to humans for many thousands of years. Together, the rich geological, biological and archaeological heritage has led to the recognition of the most scenic part of the Vredefort Dome as a World Heritage Site. A guide to one of the world's oldest and biggest meteorite impact structures INDICE: The Early History of Earth - Impact, Volcanoes, and Early Life.- Chaos and Catastrophe.- The Impact Heritage of Southern Africa.- Vredefort: TheLargest and Oldest Impact Structure in the World.- The More Recent History ofthe Vredefort Dome Area.- Tourism, and Questions Often Asked About Vredefort.- What Does the Future Hold for Mankind.- Outlook on Vredefort.

  • ISBN: 978-3-642-10463-3
  • Editorial: Springer
  • Encuadernacion: Rústica
  • Páginas: 319
  • Fecha Publicación: 01/01/2010
  • Nº Volúmenes: 1
  • Idioma: Inglés