Abstract
Abstract. A 70 m long continental sediment record was recovered at Darwin
Crater in western Tasmania, Australia. The sediment succession includes a
pre-lake silty sand deposit overlain by lacustrine silts that have
accumulated in the ∼816 ka meteorite impact crater. A total of 160 m
of overlapping sediment cores were drilled from three closely spaced holes.
Here we report on the drilling operations at Darwin Crater and present the
first results from petrophysical whole core logging, lithological core
description, and multi-proxy pilot analysis of core end samples. The
multi-proxy dataset includes spectrophotometry, grain size, natural gamma
rays, paleo- and rock magnetism, loss on ignition, and pollen analyses. The
results provide clear signatures of alternating, distinctly different
lithologies likely representing glacial and interglacial sediment facies.
Initial paleomagnetic analysis indicate normal magnetic polarity in the
deepest core at Hole B. If acquired at the time of deposition, this result
indicates that the sediment 1 m below commencement of lacustrine deposition
post-date the Matuyama–Brunhes geomagnetic reversal ∼773 ka.
Funder
Australian Research Council
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Energy Engineering and Power Technology
Cited by
8 articles.
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