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Shatter cones and planar deformation features confirm Santa Marta in Piauí State,Brazil, as an impact structure
Authors:Grace Juliana Gonçalves de Oliveira  Marcos Alberto Rodrigues Vasconcelos  Alvaro Penteado Crósta  Wolf Uwe Reimold  Ana Maria Góes  Astrid Kowitz
Affiliation:1. Institute of Geosciences, University of Campinas, , 13083‐870 Campinas, S?o Paulo, Brazil;2. Museum für Naturkunde Berlin, , 10115 Berlin, Germany;3. Humboldt Universit?t zu Berlin, , 10099 Berlin, Germany;4. Institute of Geosciences, University of S?o Paulo, , 05508‐080 S?o Paulo, Brazil
Abstract:A total of 184 confirmed impact structures are known on Earth to date, as registered by the Earth Impact Database . The discovery of new impact structures has progressed in recent years at a rather low rate of about two structures per year. Here, we introduce the discovery of the approximately 10 km diameter Santa Marta impact structure in Piauí State in northeastern Brazil. Santa Marta is a moderately sized complex crater structure, with a raised rim and an off‐center, approximately 3.2 km wide central elevated area interpreted to coincide with the central uplift of the impact structure. The Santa Marta structure was first recognized in remote sensing imagery and, later, by distinct gravity and magnetic anomalies. Here, we provide results obtained during the first detailed ground survey. The Bouguer anomaly map shows a transition from a positive to a negative anomaly within the structure along a NE–SW trend, which may be associated with the basement signature and in parts with the signature developed after the crater was formed. Macroscopic evidence for impact in the form of shatter cones has been found in situ at the base around the central elevated plateau, and also in the interior of fractured conglomerate boulders occurring on the floor of the surrounding annular basin. Planar deformation features (PDFs) are abundant in sandstones of the central elevated plateau and at scattered locations in the inner part of the ring syncline. Together, shatter cones and PDFs provide definitive shock evidence that confirms the impact origin of Santa Marta. Crystallographic orientations of PDFs occurring in multiple sets in quartz grains are indicative of peak shock pressures of 20–25 GPa in the rocks exposed at present in the interior of the crater. In contrast to recent studies that have used additional, and sometimes highly controversial, alleged shock recognition features, Santa Marta was identified based on well‐understood, traditional shock evidence.
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