Skip to Main Content
Skip Nav Destination
GEOREF RECORD

Impact processes on the early Earth

Christian Koeberl
Impact processes on the early Earth
Elements (August 2006) 2 (4): 211-216

Abstract

At the beginning of the solar system, impacts and collisions were dominant processes. After an early collision that may have led to the formation of the Moon, both Earth and Moon suffered intense post-accretionary bombardment between about 4.5 and 3.9 billion years before present. There is evidence from lunar rocks for an intense "Late Heavy Bombardment" at about 3.85-3.9 Ga, which must have had severe consequences for Earth as well, even though no terrestrial record has yet been found. Several 3.4 to 2.5 Ga old spherule layers in South Africa and Australia and two impact craters near 2 Ga represent the oldest terrestrial impact records found to date. Thus, the impact record for more than half of Earth's geological history is incomplete, and there is only indirect evidence for impact processes during the first 2.5 billion years of Earth history.


ISSN: 1811-5209
Serial Title: Elements
Serial Volume: 2
Serial Issue: 4
Title: Impact processes on the early Earth
Author(s): Koeberl, Christian
Affiliation: University of Vienna, Department of Geological Sciences, Vienna, Austria
Pages: 211-216
Published: 200608
Text Language: English
Publisher: Mineralogical Society of America and Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland and Mineralogical Association of Canada and Geochemical Society and Clay Minerals Society, International
References: 23
Accession Number: 2007-014629
Categories: StratigraphyExtraterrestrial geology
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus.
Country of Publication: International
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2018, American Geosciences Institute.
Update Code: 200705

or Create an Account

Close Modal
Close Modal