Paleomagnetism and rock magnetism of east and west Clearwater Lake impact structures
Paleomagnetism and rock magnetism of east and west Clearwater Lake impact structures (in Understanding magnetism and electromagnetism and their implications; a tribute to David W. Strangway, Jafar Arkani-Hamed (editor), David J. Dunlop (editor), John w. Geissman (editor), Ozden Ozdemir (editor) and David T. A. Symons (editor))
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences = Revue Canadienne des Sciences de la Terre (September 2019) 56 (9): 983-993
The East and West Clearwater Lake impact structures (Wiyashakimi Lake, Quebec), approximately 26 and 32 km in diameter, respectively, have been proposed to represent an impact doublet. We investigated their paleomagnetism to contribute to this debate. The paleomagnetic directions of the impact melt rocks and impact melt-bearing breccias from the West Clearwater structure are compatible with the radiometric age of 280-290 Ma previously determined for this structure and indicate that the impact occurred during a reverse polarity interval of the geomagnetic field. A similar remagnetization direction is found in the basement within 10 km of the structure center, whereas basement farther away from the center has escaped remagnetization by the impact. Samples for the East Clearwater structure come from two holes drilled in 1963 and 1964. Unfortunately, the drill hole through the melt rocks is tilted by 30 degrees from the vertical with an unknown azimuth. The paleomagnetic inclination of these melt rocks cannot be constrained to better than between -28 degrees and +32 degrees . This is, however, distinct from the inclination of the melt rocks of the West Clearwater Lake impact structure (-27.8 degrees + or - 3.7 degrees ), suggesting that the two structures do not represent an impact doublet, in agreement with recent radiometric dating. The basement rocks and the melt rocks within 10 km of the center of the West Clearwater Lake impact structure show a magnetic signature of titanohematite that crystallized during postimpact hydrothermal activity under oxidizing conditions. This is not observed in the basement or the melt rocks from the East Clearwater Lake impact structure.