2022
DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abm2434
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A Late Paleocene age for Greenland’s Hiawatha impact structure

Abstract: The ~31-km-wide Hiawatha structure, located beneath Hiawatha Glacier in northwestern Greenland, has been proposed as an impact structure that may have formed after the Pleistocene inception of the Greenland Ice Sheet. To date the structure, we conducted 40 Ar/ 39 Ar analyses on glaciofluvial sand and U-Pb analyses on zircon separated from glaciofluvial pebbles of impact melt rock, all sampled immediately downstream of Hiawatha Glacier. Unshocked zircon in the imp… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(13 citation statements)
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References 79 publications
(159 reference statements)
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“…Observations presented here provide the first comprehensive investigation of glaciofluvial impact melt rock samples collected from the ice margin in Inglefield Land (Figure 1a). With the only likely origin of the samples being from the Hiawatha impact structure, this work adds to previous studies of impact-related material collected in Inglefield Land and strongly supports the identification of a hypervelocity impact event (Garde et al, 2020(Garde et al, , 2022Gustafsson, 2020;Kenny et al, 2022;Kjaer et al, 2018). All the studied samples are melt rocks and contain a variety of shocked, unshocked, and melted materials mixed during their formation.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 74%
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“…Observations presented here provide the first comprehensive investigation of glaciofluvial impact melt rock samples collected from the ice margin in Inglefield Land (Figure 1a). With the only likely origin of the samples being from the Hiawatha impact structure, this work adds to previous studies of impact-related material collected in Inglefield Land and strongly supports the identification of a hypervelocity impact event (Garde et al, 2020(Garde et al, , 2022Gustafsson, 2020;Kenny et al, 2022;Kjaer et al, 2018). All the studied samples are melt rocks and contain a variety of shocked, unshocked, and melted materials mixed during their formation.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 74%
“…We follow the recommendation of Osinski et al (2022): "samples in which shock metamorphic criteria are determined need not be in situ, as long as there is a clear topographic crater form and evidence (e.g., glacial flow directions) to connect the two". Clear evidence connecting sampled material to the Hiawatha structure under the ice has already been demonstrated (Figure 1a) (Kenny et al, 2022;Kjaer et al, 2018), and here, we therefore refer to the crater as the Hiawatha impact structure herein. FIGURE 1.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 79%
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