I don’t cover many science topics here, but this story fascinated me. Scientists have recently confirmed that an “asteroid as big as a city block” created a crater more than three miles wide under what is now Decorah, Iowa. This anomaly would be only the 184th confirmed impact crater on earth, according to an excellent piece by Brian Vastag for the Washington Post. Bevan French, an adjunct scientist at the National Museum of Natural History, announced the discovery last month. His research built on the work of geologists from the Iowa Department of Natural Resources began several years ago. Aerial surveys conducted this year provided more evidence of the meteor crater, Science Daily reported today.
Scientists estimate that the meteor smashed into what is now northeast Iowa approximately 470 million years ago, during the Ordovician geologic period. That’s way before the age of dinosaurs–in fact, before any amphibians, bony fish, or reptiles appeared on earth. Quite a few meteors hit earth around this time, probably asteroid fragments created by a “massive collision in the asteroid belt beyond Mars.”
8 Comments
That's two then
I read this WAPO story a couple weeks ago but apparently not carefully enough. I thought they were referring to the Manson Crater anomoly which I have known about for some time.
I guess I’ll have to begin GOOGLING geology papers to learn about this Decorah one now.
conservative-demo Tue 5 Mar 9:23 PM
looks like the Manson crater
was created much later, during the Cretaceous period (near the end of the age of dinosaurs).
desmoinesdem Tue 5 Mar 9:30 PM
The ledges area around Boone looks alot like Decorah
Lots of lime stone cliffs. Lots of geologic features from the Ordovician. I wonder if something interesting happened here?
dameocrat Tue 5 Mar 9:37 PM
I have never been to Decorah
but I love the Ledges park. Don’t know the geological history of the area. There are also some cliffs at the Whiterock Conservancy near Coon Rapids, but that’s related to where the glacier halted during the last ice age, I think.
desmoinesdem Tue 5 Mar 10:07 PM
Iowa landforms
Out of a couple feet worth of books on geology of the upper midwest one of my favorites for just browsing is an older one:
Landforms of Iowa by Jean C. Prior (1991, Paperback)
Jean C. Prior | ISBN-10: 0877453470 | ISBN-13: 9780877453475
conservative-demo Tue 5 Mar 10:22 PM
470 million years ago
The young-earth creationists will be in denial.
cocinero Wed 6 Mar 12:49 PM
I was thinking the same thing
How do they process this information about craters and geological shifts? I guess they think God planted a bunch of false evidence to test our faith.
desmoinesdem Wed 6 Mar 6:46 PM
An entire industry
I have a friend who believes that way and I’ve learned to no longer attempt pointing out scientific fact. For every scientific fact he and they have perfectly logical, to them, explanations that dismiss th science and prove their biblical timescale.
It is a whole industry devoted to just that.
conservative-demo Wed 6 Mar 8:47 PM