Posted on 09/09/2024 1:27:02 PM PDT by Red Badger
The structure in Quebec, Canada.
Image credit: Google Maps
Aman browsing Google Maps whilst planning a camping trip in Quebec's Côte-Nord region has potentially discovered the site of an ancient asteroid impact.
People have discovered all sorts of oddities while browsing through Google Maps, from "aliens" and camera-hogging cats to the answer to decades old cold cases. In the latest find, Joël Lapointe stumbled across an unusual, roughly spherical structure about 15 kilometers (9.3 miles) across surrounding Marsal Lake in Quebec.
Lapointe contacted geophysicist Pierre Rochette of the Centre de recherche en géosciences de l'environnement (CEREGE) in France for help identifying the strange feature.
While generally structures found on Google Maps can turn out to be nothing, the team has determined an ancient impact event could have caused it.
"Looking at the topography, it's very suggestive of impact," Rochette told Canadian news outlet CBC.
Intrigued, Rochette and colleagues took a closer look at the area, and now believe the ring of small mountains surrounding the lake may have previously been miscategorized.
"This formation, interpreted as a volcanoclastic diatreme formation named Marsal breccia, in an area devoid of post Grenvillian magmatism [...] is in fact more in agreement with a crater floor clast-poor melt rock, quite similar to the Mistastin and Janisjarvi cases," the team wrote in a new paper.
The area shows no sign of a gravity anomaly, where gravity is stronger or weaker than the expected value based on the amount of mass we believe to be in the area (think slightly denser or lighter rock). However, the team believes that the data isn't fine-grained enough to distinguish an anomaly smaller than 10-15 kilometers (6.2-9.3 miles) in diameter, requiring further fieldwork.
While not confirmed, signs do look promising that Lapointe stumbled across an ancient impact event while idly browsing Google Maps. Looking at samples taken from the site, the team identified silicates, abundant magnetite, sulfides, and zircons, all promising indications of impact melt rock. Based on levels of erosion, the team estimates that the impact could have taken place between 450 and 38 million years ago.
"Based on the already available preliminary evidence, Lake Marsal seems to be a serious candidate to become the 11th confirmed impact structure from Quebec," the team wrote, adding "confirmation of impact origin may be gained from the available sampling or else may wait for a future dedicated expedition."
The team hopes to visit the site soon, to assess it for further evidence of an impact event.
The findings were presented in a paper at the 86th Annual Meeting of the Meteoritical Society 2024.
I was expecting this. Instead, I got a hole in the ground.
Yes, Earth is what I use too. But I am about out of that hobby because of the spyware Google Earth implants in my machine as part of their client/app.
-PJ
Yes, unfortunately it won’t let me use it without also downloading their spy garbage. If I can’t use or read a site and still have my security tools block Google I move on and can live without it. Here is why, and it is not just Youtube, It is all sites that use Google third party services.
https://freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/4256244/posts
What spyware have you found?
I use GE a lot
Wow- that's the first thing that came to my mind.
The desktop Google client/app you install updates everything you do to Google. It is literally a spy you installed into your box. Even when you are not using GE go watch your processes in your system monitor. You can watch it send stuff to Google as fast as it can as you use it. There should be absolutely nothing going to Google if you are not using the GE app and hooking to their GE server. So they are sending everything you do in real time to a second server.
I found this years ago with GE. And it was rough on me, I am addicted to it... lol
It looks like Little Cultus Lake, Oregon to me. A volcanic formation.
Well they say they analyzed the geology...
The feature “surrounds the lake”?
...When it IS the lake!
That circular lake certainly does suggest an impact feature.
See also the location in Post #7, if you haven’t already.
A meteorite impact 1.4 million years ago, again according to Wikipedia.
Everybody knows that!.....................
Ping-a-looey!....................
That movies scared the hell outta me!...............When I was seven!....
Well, you definitely know your balls from a hole in the ground.....................
Me too!......................🙄
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