Luna crater

Impact crater in Luna, Gujarat, India From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Luna crater or Luna structure is an impact crater at Luna village in Bhuj taluka of Kutch district of Gujarat, India. The crater is located in a low-lying, soft, flat area and appears unconventional and deceptive when compared to other craters in India, which are usually found on hard, rocky surfaces.[1]

Quick Facts Impact crater/structure, Diameter ...
Luna crater
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Impact crater/structure
Diameter1.2 kilometres (34 mi)
CountryIndia
StateGujarat
DistrictKutch district
MunicipalityLuna village in Bhuj taluka
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The structure is the result of the largest iron bolide of the last 10,000 years[2] or even 50,000 years.[3]

Description

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Perspective

Rock fragments and glasslike materials found at the site indicate a meteorite impact, the date of which has tentatively been put at around 2000 BCE.[4] The crater, located in the Rann of Kutch, is circular, with a diameter of 1.2 kilometres (34 mi), and its lowest point is only about 2 metres (6.6 ft) above sea level.[5]

The crater is visibly a kilometre wide, but the satellite radar imagery shows it is spread over a five kilometres radius. Since it lacks the characteristics of a typical impact site, it is a unique site in the world  it has a very low depth to diameter ratio. A round lake 1 square kilometre in area and 2 meters in depth lies in the centre of the crater, which remains dry during the summer. The depression is covered with thick vegetation of thorny Acacia species (Acacia nilotica and Prosopis juliflora). The rim, with upturned beds and shatter cone, has no hard rocks. X-ray analysis of the materials adhering to meteorite fragments revealed stishovite and coesite, the high pressure polymorphs of silica, which confirms the impact origin of the crater.[1]

Among the various evidences expected at an impact site, dark, heavy, magnetic fragments, like metallic meteorites, with spherical cavities are found at the rim of the structure, and glassy objects comparable to tektites have been recovered.[6]

Religious significance

The Luna Dham Temple lies at the north end of the crater.

More potential craters in Kutch

The satellite data indicates that there could be a few more craters within the Kutch, which are hidden by subsequent denudational activities.[1]

See also

Impact craters in India
Other related topics

References

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