Showing posts with label Charles O`Dale. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charles O`Dale. Show all posts

11 November 2016

Impact Craters 101 - Live YouTube 11NOV2016 @ 20:30 (8:30 PM) Eastern

Impact Craters 101 - featuring Charles O'Dale
Live on YouTube 11NOV2016 @ 20:30 (8:30 PM) Eastern

Impact Craters 101 - featuring Charles O'Dale
USA/Canada NOV 11 20:30 Eastern
Japan Live NOV 12 10:30 am JST (UT +9)
EP. 007 - Younger Dryas Extinction Impact Event w/ Charles P. O'Dale
I will be on the youtube(iverse) tomorrow, Friday 11/11 @ 20:30 (8:30 PM).

2016 The THIRD Year of "CERTAIN Uncertainty" ™ / Meteors, Asteroids, Comets, and MORE!!

09 March 2009

Exploring the Pingualuit Impact Crater 7MAR09


Photo by Charles O`Dale for the Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society

April, 9, 2009

Exploring the Pingualuit Impact Crater

by Charles O’Dale, Ottawa Centre (codale0806@rogers.com)

Introduction

The Pingualuit Impact Crater, located in northern Quebec at N 61° 16´ W 73° 40´, was the first structure in Canada for which an impact origin was proposed. The structure is classified as a simple crater, 2.8 km in diameter and 400 m deep. It is slightly larger than the smallest crater on the Moon that is observable from our planet (Meen 1951). The inner slopeof the 3.4-km-diameter rim averages 30° and the outer slope averages 10°. The rim extends to a diameter of ~4.6 km and continues gradually outward to merge with the surrounding terrain at ~6.6 km. The peak of the rim is ~160 m above the inner lake level and 120 - 150 m above the regional terrain. The lake within the crater, with a depth of over 250 m, is one ofthe deepest in North America. It is also one of the clearest in the world with a transparency of over 35 m. Dating using the isotope ratio 40Ar-39Ar (Grieve 2006) gives the impact structurean age of 1.4 ± 0.1 Ma. The Pingualuit Impact Crater was formerly named New Quebec Crater and, previous to that, Chubb Crater.
NOTE: Whole article is to be published soon and I will add more photos later.