THERMAL MATURITY IN THE CHESAPEAKE BAY IMPACT STRUCTURE: DATA FROM THE EYREVILLE DEEP CORES, VIRGINIA, USA
In the Eyreville cores, thermal maturities increase linearly downward through the post-impact sediments (0- 444 m) and the upper 80 m of the syn-impact Exmore diamicton to 0.36% Rm (mean random vitrinite reflectance). At 525 m depth, in a transition zone where the Exmore diamicton interfingers with the underlying sediment blocks, the slope of reflectance versus depth increases, and strata are marginally mature (0.42-0.52% Rm). These reflectances are also higher than those measured and modeled at equivalent depths in Baltimore Canyon (COST) and Coastal Plain boreholes. However, within 20 m of the top of the suevite (1,398 m depth), reflectance in the sediment-clast breccia still does not exceed 0.6% Rm.
To date, thermal data from the 150-m-thick suevite and underlying fractured schist and pegmatites put only upper limits on maximum effective syn- to post-impact temperatures of those units. In the suevite, between 1,490 and 1,510 m depth, reflectances from black shale clasts average 5% Rm. It is not yet clear whether this maturity is impact-related or inherited from Paleozoic sub-greenschist metamorphism. However, it does suggest that impact-related heating that would have affected organic maturation did not exceed 300-350˚C within the suevite. Below the suevite, Ar40/Ar39 age spectra data from two muscovite samples separated from pegmatite at 1,697 and 1,702 m yielded cooling ages of 244.2 and 243.9 Ma with no evidence of impact heating >350˚C .
In the Cape Charles hole on the central uplift, ten km from Eyreville, published peak fluid inclusion homogenization temperatures are 235-257˚C at 747 m depth. Modeled reflectances over 1.5% Rm for these conditions suggest, not unexpectedly, higher post-impact temperatures at shallower depths at Cape Charles due to conductive heating from advected isotherms and hydrothermal upwelling controlled by central uplift morphology.