2006 Philadelphia Annual Meeting (22–25 October 2006)

Paper No. 4
Presentation Time: 2:30 PM

INSIGHTS INTO THE STRUCTURALLY COMPLEX INNER CRATER OF THE CHESAPEAKE BAY IMPACT STRUCTURE FROM GEOPHYSICS AND DEEP TEST HOLES


POWARS, David S., CATCHINGS, Rufus D., GOHN, Greg S., HORTON Jr, J. Wright, EDWARDS, Lucy E., DANIELS, David L. and PIERCE, Herb A., U.S. Geol Survey, 926A National Center, 12201 Sunrise Valley Drive, Reston, VA 20192, dpowars@visuallink.com

Preliminary analyses of marine and land-based seismic-refraction, seismic-reflection, gravity, and magnetotelluric (MT) data, as well as data from an 823-m-deep partially cored USGS test hole and a 1.76-km-deep, continuously cored ICDP-USGS test hole provide insights into the configuration of the inner crater of the buried, late Eocene Chesapeake Bay impact structure. The main features of the 35- to 38-km-diameter inner crater are a broad central uplift surrounded by an elliptical, structurally collapsed moat. The inner crater is bounded by a complex, variably-collapsed margin with a raised rim. The raised rim in part coincides with locally stacked, top-of-basement seismic-reflection signatures that may represent partially preserved crystalline-flap remnants. Gravity, MT, seismic-velocity, and seismic-reflection images define a NW-SE-elongate, ~10-km-wide (short axis) central uplift that rises about 1 km above the floor of the surrounding moat. Seismic velocity images suggest that a major decrease in the velocity gradient at the 5.6 km/s contour may represent the top of coherent basement rocks that underlie the crater floor. A strong set of continuous reflectors descends from the central uplift at a depth of 2.0 km down to ~3.2 km depth over a 5 km horizontal distance and may represent the flank of the central uplift where slumped megablocks sharply overlie autochthonous, fractured crystalline-basement rocks. The USGS test hole on the central uplift penetrated sediment-clast breccia below 355-m depth and polymict suevitic breccia and monomict brecciated gneiss below 655-m depth. The velocity and seismic-reflection data suggest impactites may be ~1.4 km thick over the central uplift. The moat is ~15 km wide and corresponds to a gravity minimum, comparatively low electrical resistivities, and relatively continuous, subhorizontal, inward-dipping seismic reflections from synimpact and postimpact sedimentary sections. Inward-dipping reflections and relatively steep gradients of gravity (19.5 to 25.0 mGal), resistivity, and seismic-velocity mark the inner-crater margin. The ICDP-USGS deep corehole was drilled in the moat and recovered 1,322 m of impactites below 444 m of postimpact sediments, where seismic-reflection data suggests that impactites may reach ~2.7 km in thickness.