The discovery of a massive crater formed by the impact of a meteorite more than 3.5 billion years ago is changing the way ...
Curtin University researchers have discovered the world's oldest known meteorite impact crater, which could significantly ...
The discovery of a 3.47-billion-year-old crater in WA's Pilbara region pushes back the age of the earliest-known impact site on Earth by more than one billion years.
Geologists have now unearthed evidence of a 3.5 billion-year-old crater found in a layer of Australian rock. Shatter cones, which are features caused by the shockwave of a hypervelocity meteorite ...
THE world’s oldest-known crater from an asteroid smash 3.5 billion years ago has been discovered in the Australian outback.
Get Instant Summarized Text (Gist) The discovery of the world's oldest known meteorite impact crater in the Pilbara Craton, Western Australia, dates back 3.5 billion years, significantly older ...
“Before our discovery, the oldest impact crater was 2.2 billion years old, so this is by far the oldest known crater ever ...
Curtin University researchers have discovered the world’s oldest known meteorite impact crater, which could significantly redefine our understanding of the origins of life and how our planet was ...
Professor Johnson and his colleagues suggested contentiously there had been a massive impact 3.6 billion years ago that formed a 250,000 square-kilometre region in WA known as the Pilbara Craton.