Abstract
New occurrences of the Acraman impact ejecta layer were recently discovered in two South Australian drillholes, SCYW-79 1a (Stuart Shelf) and Munta 1 (Officer Basin) using lithostratigraphy, acritarch biostratigraphy, carbon isotope stratigraphy, and biomarker anomalies to predict the stratigraphic position. The ejecta layer is conspicuous because it consists of pink, sand-sized, angular fragments of volcanic rock distributed along the bedding plane surface of green marine siltstone. In SCYW-79 1a it forms a layer 5 mm thick; in Munta 1 the ejecta layer is thin and discontinuous because of its distance (∼550 km) from the impact structure. Palynological, biomarker, and carbon isotope anomalies can now be shown to coincide with the ejecta layer in SCYW-79 1a and Munta 1 suggesting the Acraman impact event may have had far reaching influences on the rapidly evolving Ediacaran biological and geochemical cycles. © The Meteoritical Society, 2007.
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CITATION STYLE
Hill, A. C., Haines, P. W., Grey, K., & Willman, S. (2007). New records of Ediacaran Acraman ejecta in drillholes from the Stuart Shelf and Officer Basin, South Australia. In Meteoritics and Planetary Science (Vol. 42, pp. 1883–1891). University of Arkansas. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1945-5100.2007.tb00547.x
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