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Beryllium-10 in Australasian tektites: Constraints on the location of the source crater
Authors:P Ma  K Aggrey  C Tonzola  C Schnabel  P de Nicola  JT Wasson  L Brown  R Middleton
Institution:1 Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, Rutgers University, Piscataway, New Jersey 08854-8087, USA
2 Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics, University of California, Los Angeles, California 90024-1567, USA
3 Department of Geology, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware 19716, USA
4 Department of Terrestrial Magnetism, Carnegie Institution of Washington, 5261 Broad Branch Road, N.W., Washington, DC 20015, USA
5 Department of Physics, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104, USA
Abstract:By using accelerator mass spectrometry we have measured the 10Be concentrations of 86 Australasian tektites. Corrected to the time of tektite production ∼0.8 My ago, the 10Be concentrations (106 atom/g) range from 59 for a layered tektite from Huai Sai, Thailand, to 280 for an australite from New South Wales, Australia. The average value is 143 ± 50. When tektites are sorted by country, their average measured 10Be concentrations increase slowly with increasing distance from Southeast Asia, the probable location of the tektite producing event, from 59 ± 9 for 6 layered tektites from Laos to 136 ± 20 for 20 splash-form tektites from Australia. The lowest 10Be concentrations for tektites fall on or within a contour centered off the shore of Vietnam, south of the Gulf of Tonkin (107°E; 17°N), but also encompassing two other locations in the area of northeastern Thailand previously proposed for the site of a single tektite-producing impact. The 10Be concentrations of layered tektites show only a weak anticorrelation (R ∼ −0.3) with the numbers of relict crystalline inclusions.Loosely consolidated, fine-grained terrestrial sediments or recently consolidated sedimentary rocks are the most likely precursor materials. Dilution of sediments with other kinds of rock raises problems in mixing and is not supported by petrographic data. Sedimentary columns that have the right range of 10Be concentrations occur off the coasts of places where sedimentation rates are high relative to those in the deep sea. A single impact into such a region, 15 to 300 m thick, could have propelled near-surface, high-10Be material farthest—to Australia—while keeping the deeper-lying, low-10Be layers closer to home. We do not rule out, however, other proposed mechanisms for tektite formation.
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