1998
DOI: 10.1111/j.1945-5100.1998.tb01639.x
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Popigai crater: Origin and distribution of diamond‐bearing impactites

Abstract: Abstract-About three decades ago, a formerly unknown genetic type of natural diamonds was discovered in impact craters. Impact diamonds are currently known from a number of impact structures in Europe, Asia and North America, and it's likely that the number of finds will increase with time. The Popigai crater, Northern Siberia, where impact diamonds were first found, was specifically investigated in terms of geology, geophysics, petrography and mineralogy. Large resources of industrial impact diamonds were dis… Show more

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Cited by 78 publications
(60 citation statements)
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“…1), they were analyzed from the lateral direction (perpendicular to the basal plane), assuming that the platy morphology is derived from the source single-crystalline graphite, just like the case of Popigai diamond (Masaitis, 1998;Ohfuji et al, 2015). Figure 2 shows 2D diffraction patterns of the 3 yakutite samples, in which Debye rings of diamond 111, 220, 311 are clearly seen.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…1), they were analyzed from the lateral direction (perpendicular to the basal plane), assuming that the platy morphology is derived from the source single-crystalline graphite, just like the case of Popigai diamond (Masaitis, 1998;Ohfuji et al, 2015). Figure 2 shows 2D diffraction patterns of the 3 yakutite samples, in which Debye rings of diamond 111, 220, 311 are clearly seen.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lonsdaleite has, therefore, been previously taken as evidence for shock impact formation (9), although it can also be created in low quantities during carbon vapor deposition (CVD) (10,11). Furthermore, the presence of lonsdaleite in impact craters has been challenged and the use of nanodiamonds as a diagnostic criterion for an impact is still debated (8,9,12,13).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The polymorphs they reported include cubic (3C) diamond, lonsdaleite (2H diamond), and n-diamond (fcc carbon). Lonsdaleite is especially of interest because, in nature, it is reported only in meteorites (7) or in relation to impact craters (8,9), and is generally formed through shock deformation of graphite or diamond. Lonsdaleite has, therefore, been previously taken as evidence for shock impact formation (9), although it can also be created in low quantities during carbon vapor deposition (CVD) (10,11).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While the elemental wealth already existed in the target region prior to the impact, it was only the impact catastrophe that facilitated formation of sufficient melt, from which the enrichment of the resource could progress. Impact-derived diamond and lonsdaleite occur in abundance in the Popigai structure in northern Siberia (Masaitis 1998;Grieve and Masaitis 1994), but also have been described in small amounts from other impact structures. It has even been mooted that the carbonado riches of Central Africa and those parts of South America that were part of this region prior to the break-up of Gondwana could have been formed in a catastrophic impact event in the Ubangui basin of the northern Congo and the Central African Republic.…”
Section: Impact Cratering -An Integrated Disciplinementioning
confidence: 99%