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ESA satellite images Manicouagan Crater
by Brooks Hays
Riviere-Mouchalagane, Quebec (UPI) Oct 30, 2015


disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

Earlier this year, the European Space Agency's Sentinel-1A satellite imaged the oldest and most visible crater on Earth, the Manicouagan Crater. ESA shared the image online on Friday, October 30.

The circular imprint is located in Quebec and dated at 214 million years old. It was caused by the impact of an asteroid three miles wide. Today, part of the leftover scar is filled with water, forming Manicouagan Lake.

The multi-ring impact structure measures some 62 miles in diameter, making it the sixth largest (by width) confirmed impact crater. The impact's main feature is its 40-mile-wide inner ring, comprising the annular lake and inner island plateau, Rene-Levasseur Island. Over the millions of years since the collision, erosion has greatly augmented the asteroids imprint.

Researchers believe the crater is one of several associated impact sites. In a 1998 study, scientists proffered that a single asteroid, broken into pieces during its descent through the Earth's atmosphere, created a chain of impacts: France's Rochechouart crater, Manitoba's Saint Martin crater, Ukraine's Obolon' crater and North Dakota's Red Wing crater.

Laser argon dating puts them all at the same age, and analysis of plate tectonics suggests they were once geologically aligned.

Sentinel-1A is a weather satellite which uses bursts of radar to image the landscape and atmosphere. Artificial color was added by ESA scientists. The polar orbiting satellite was launched in 2014.


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