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North Sea Crater: Asteroid Impact Reveals 100m Tsunami

by Rachel Kim – Technology Editor

“Kilometer-High ⁤Wall of Rock”: Asteroid Impact Solved ‍as ⁢Mystery ⁢of⁣ North Sea’s ‘Silverpit’ ⁤Crater Unveiled

LONDON – A decades-long geological ‍puzzle has been solved: the ‍massive ‘Silverpit’ ‍crater in the ‍North Sea, discovered in 2002, was formed by an asteroid impact approximately 43⁤ too 46‌ million years ago, triggering a colossal tsunami. Researchers from Heriot-Watt University⁣ in Edinburgh announced the findings today,confirming the structure’s origin after years of debate.

The circular Silverpit crater,hidden⁣ 700 meters beneath the seabed off the east coast of England,measures roughly eight kilometers‍ in diameter. While it’s shape⁢ initially‍ suggested an impact origin, some geologists proposed​ option ​explanations, including salt‌ movements and volcanic activity.

however,the research team,led by Uisdean Nicholson,has‌ now presented compelling evidence supporting the asteroid ​theory. “We found evidence that a 160 meter wide⁤ asteroid hit the ​sea floor from a western ⁢direction,” Nicholson stated, according to a university notice.⁣

The impact created a “1.5 km high wall ‍of​ rock and water” within minutes, later collapsing and‍ generating a ⁤tsunami exceeding 100 meters ‍in‍ height, Nicholson⁣ explained.

crucial‍ evidence came from new seismic ‌recordings providing “an‌ unprecedented insight into‍ the crater,” ⁤alongside the finding of rare quartz and feldspar crystals ⁤in oil source samples at‍ the crater’s depth. These crystals, ​the researchers say, could‌ only have formed under the “extreme shock pressure” of an impact ‍event. The​ findings ‌have been published in⁢ the⁣ journal Nature Communications.

the confirmation of Silverpit as an impact crater adds‍ it to a select group ⁣of known​ impact⁢ sites, ⁣including the Chicxulub crater ⁢in Mexico – linked to the dinosaur extinction – and‌ the recently confirmed⁤ Nadir​ crater off West Africa. According to‍ Nicholson, of the roughly 200 confirmed impact craters⁣ globally, only about‍ 33 have been found underwater, highlighting the challenges ⁤of oceanic⁢ discovery.

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