http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8400264.stm

Chuck
http://ottawa-rasc.ca/wiki/index.php?title=Odale-Articles
'Fried Egg' may be impact crater  
By Jonathan Amos 
Science correspondent, BBC News, San Francisco  
'Fried Egg' may be impact crater  
By Jonathan Amos 
Science correspondent, BBC News, San Francisco  
'Fried Egg' may be impact crater 
Portuguese scientists have found a depression on the Atlantic Ocean floor they 
think may be an impact crater. 
The roughly circular, 6km-wide hollow has a broad central dome and has been 
dubbed the "Fried Egg" because of its distinctive shape. 
It was detected to the south of the Azores Islands during a survey to map the 
continental shelf. 
If the Fried Egg was made by a space impactor, the collision probably took 
place within the past 17 million years. 


This is the likely maximum age of the basaltic sea-floor rock which harbours 
the feature. 
"To be sure, we need to take samples and make a profile of the sediment layers 
to determine if there really is a central uplift from an impact," explained Dr 
Frederico Dias from EMEPC (Task Group for the Extension of the Portuguese 
Continental Shelf). 
"We need also to see all the signatures that are consistent with a high 
velocity impact, like glasses from melting and, of course, debris; and what are 
called shatter cones (shocked rocks)," he told BBC News. 
Central peaks
Dr Dias described the putative impact feature here at the American Geophysical 
Union's (AGU) Fall Meeting, the world's largest annual gathering of Earth 
scientists. 
The Fried Egg was first identified in data gathered by a 2008 multibeam 
echosounder hydrographic survey. A further cruise from September to November 
this year confirmed its presence. 
It lies under 2km of water about 150km from the Azores archipelago. 
The depressed ring sits roughly 110m below the surrounding ocean bottom, with 
the circular dome-shaped central uplift 3km in diameter and with a base-to-top 
height of some 300m. 
Central peaks are often associated with meteorite impacts and form when the 
compressed crater floor rebounds. A peak is not definitive proof of an impact, 
however. 
A volcanic origin for the Fried Egg seems unlikely because the Portuguese team 
has not been able to find any lava flows within the structure or on its 
surroundings. 
Second crater
Interestingly, there is another - but much smaller - feature just 3-4km to the 
west of the egg. 
"It's just by the side. If the Fried Egg is a crater, this could be a crater 
also," speculated Dr Dias. 
Dr Dias and colleagues are examining gravity and magnetic data gathered during 
September's cruise. A third expedition to the area early next year will use a 
remotely operated vehicle (ROV) to try to retrieve samples from the ocean floor 
for analysis. 
The Portuguese team detailed the currently available Fried Egg data on a poster 
at the AGU meeting. Other researchers who came to view the information were 
split on the impact theory, Dr Dias said. 
"Even if it's not an impact crater it's still a very interesting feature," he 
told the BBC. 
The EMEPC is working under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea 
to establish the true extent of Portuguese territorial waters. 
jonathan.amos-inter...@bbc.co.uk

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