The Canyon Diablo meteorite refers to the many fragments of the asteroid that created Meteor Crater (also called Barringer Crater),[3] Arizona, United States. Meteorites have been found around the crater rim, and are named for nearby Canyon Diablo, which lies about three to four miles west of the crater.
Iron meteorite from Meteor Crater used as sulfur isotopic reference material
For other uses, see Canyon Diablo (disambiguation).
Canyon Diablo
Canyon Diablo iron meteorite fragment (IAB) 2,641 grams
The impactor fell about 50,000 years ago.[4] Initially known and used by pre-historic Native Americans, Canyon Diablo meteorites have been collected and studied by the scientific community since the 19th century. Meteor Crater, from the late 19th to the early 20th century, was the center of a long dispute over the origin of craters that showed little evidence of volcanism. That debate was largely settled by the early 1930s, thanks to work by Daniel M. Barringer, F.R. Moulton, Harvey Harlow Nininger, and Eugene Shoemaker.[5][6][7][8][9][10][11]
In 1953, Clair Cameron Patterson measured ratios of the lead isotopes in samples of the meteorite. Through U-Pb radiometric dating, a refined estimate of the age of the Earth was obtained: 4.550 billion years (± 70 million years).[12]
Composition and classification
This meteorite is an iron octahedrite (coarse octahedrite).
Minerals reported from the meteorite include:
Cohenite – iron carbide
Chromite – iron magnesium chromium oxide
Daubréelite – iron(II) chromium sulfide
Diamond and lonsdaleite – carbon
Graphite – carbon
Haxonite – iron nickel carbide
Kamacite iron nickel alloy – the most common component.
Base metal sulfides
Schreibersite – iron nickel phosphide
Taenite – iron nickel alloy
Troilite – a variety of the iron sulfide mineral pyrrhotite. The troilite in this sample is used as the standard reference for sulfur isotope ratios.
Moissanite – a variety of silicon carbide, the second hardest natural mineral.
Samples may contain troilite-graphite nodules with metal veins and small diamonds.
Fragments
"Holsinger Meteorite", the biggest recovered fragment of the Canyon Diablo meteoriteExample of a small (90mm) fragment of the meteorite
The biggest fragment ever found is the Holsinger Meteorite, weighing 639 kilograms (1,409lb), now on display in the Meteor Crater Visitor Center on the rim of the crater. Other famous fragments:
"Barringer Crater". Oxford Reference. Oxford. Retrieved November 16, 2021.
Roddy, D. J.; E. M. Shoemaker (1995). "Meteor Crater (Barringer Meteorite Crater), Arizona: summary of impact conditions". Meteoritics. 30 (5): 567. Bibcode:1995Metic..30Q.567R.
Barringer, D.M. (1906). "Coon Mountain and its Crater." Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 57:861–86. PDF
Moulton, F. R. (August 24, 1929). Report on the Meteor Crater – I. Philadelphia: Barringer Crater Company.
Moulton, F. R. (November 20, 1929). Report on the Meteor Crater – II. Philadelphia: Barringer Crater Company.
Crowson, Henry L. (1971). "A method for determining the residual meteoritical mass in the Barringer Meteor Crater". Pure and Applied Geophysics. 85 (1): 38–68. Bibcode:1971PApGe..85...38C. doi:10.1007/bf00875398. S2CID140725009.
Artemieva N.; Pierazzo E (2010). "The Canyon Diablo impact event: Projectile motion through the atmosphere". Meteoritics & Planetary Science. 44 (1): 25–42. doi:10.1111/j.1945-5100.2009.tb00715.x.
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