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日本の Impact Craters:©2007-2009


This is a list of geological features in Japan that have been proposed as impact craters; all are doutful. None are recognized as authentic impact craters in the Earth Impact Database 2007 http://www.unb.ca/passc/ImpactDatabase/ .


Akiyoshi  秋吉

Akiyoshi-dai,Yamaguchi-ken, Japan

Proposed; not approved.

 

Akiyoshi Limestone Blocks Transported by the P/T Boundary Event to Japan Islands.  Miura, Y. (2004)

http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meetings/lpsc2004/pdf/2150.pdf


Amami 奄美?

28°25' N, 129°38' E

Kagoshima, Japan

Doubtful.

Two craters, up to 2.4km in diameter, are listed, J. Classen, Meteoritics, 1977, vol. 12, p.61.  1


Hoshikubo 

26°16'N, 127°47'E

Okinawa, Japan

Doubtful.

 

A crater 600 meters in diameter may be meteoritic; listed with no further details, Classen, Meteoritics, 1977, vol.12, p.61.  1


Hoshinoko-Zan

35°44'N, 133°14'E

Hiroshima, Japan

Doubtful.

A small crater may be meteoritic; listed without further details, Classen, Meteoritics, 1977, vol.12, p.61.  1


Oike   お池

Oike Yama, Nagano-ken, Japan

Crater is reported to be 900m in diameter.

PDFs, shocked quartz, have been reported as found.  Researchers included Masao Sakamoto, head teacher at
Tatsuoka Primary School in Iida, Nagano Prefecture, and a research team from the Okayama University of Science.

http://www.mail-archive.com/meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com/msg14369.html  (Yomiuri Shimbun, Sept. 5, 2003)


Sea of Japan

Doubtful.

Included by R. Gallant (Bombarded Earth, London, 1964; Monod, 1965) as a possible meteorite crater.  1


Takamatsu 高松

34.3° N, 134.5° E

Takamatsu, Kagawa Prefecture, Japan

Proposed; not approved.

References:

Petrology of Glassy Rocks from Takamatsu Crater, Kagawa Prefecture, Japan by Ryoko Yamada and Hiroaki Sato (1998)

http://wwwsoc.nii.ac.jp/jampeg/93-8.htm

 

Impact Structure in Japan, Paper No. 239-11, by Miura, Yasunori (2002)

http://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2002AM/finalprogram/abstract_43973.htm

 

Impact Drilled Samples of Buried Crater Structure at Takamatsu-Kagawa District in Japan by Miura, Y., N. Koga and A. Nakamura (2003) 

http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meetings/largeimpacts2003/pdf/4122.pdf

 

Analyses of Surface and Underground Data of Takamatsu Crater in Japan by Miura, Y. (2007)
http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meetings/lpsc2007/pdf/1188.pdf

 

Crater Analysis by Multiple Maps of Earth and Its Application to Extra-terrestrial Surfaces by Miura, Y. (2007)

http://www.dlr.de/pf/Portaldata/6/Resources/dokumente/isprs_2007/Miura_ISPRS_2007.pdf


 

Earth Impact Database Criteria for an Impact Crater:2

http://www.unb.ca/passc/ImpactDatabase/


"The principal criteria for determining if a geological feature is an impact structure formed by the hypervelocity impact of a meteorite or comet are listed below. The criteria can be divided into megascopic (overview – bird’s eye / satellite scale), macroscopic (can be seen easily seen with the naked eye) and microscopic (requires a microscope to see) features, as follows:

Presence of shatter cones that are in situ (macroscopic evidence).

Presence of multiple planar deformation features (PDFs) in minerals within in situ lithologies (microscopic evidence).

Presence of high pressure mineral polymorphs within in situ lithologies (microscopic evidence and requiring proof via X-ray diffraction, etc.).

Morphometry. On other planetary bodies, such as the Moon and Mars, we rely on the shape of the impact structure to determine its presence and type (simple versus complex, etc.). This is a megascopic quality (i.e., too big to be seen unaided by the humaneye , thus requiring remote sensing, aerial photography, detailed mapping of multiple outcrops to assemble and view the typically km- or multiple km-size structure). On Earth, recognizing impact structures solely by their morphometry is complicated by two factors: (a) weathering, erosion, burial processes and tectonic deformation can obscure and/or destroy the original shape; (b) certain terrestrial features generated by means other than impact can have comparable circular form (e.g., volcanoes, salt diapirs, glacigenic features), such that a circular structure alone is not sufficient to claim impact structure status. Some buried craters have been revealed solely by geophysical techniques, although drill core is typically required to reveal macro- and microscopic evidence to prove an impact origin.

Presence of an impact melt sheet and/or dikes, and impact melt breccias that were generated due to hypervelocity impact (macroscopic). These bodies typically have a crustal composition derived by the fusion of target rocks (i.e., there is no mantle contribution to the melt). Such meltsmay be contaminated by meteoritic (projectile) components (the latter requires specialized geochemical analysis to detect the projectile components). Melt sheets may be overlain by so-called fallback breccias (referred to as “suevite” by some workers), and material blasted out of the crater may form ejecta blankets about the original central cavity. For large impact events, ejecta can be distributed globally. Impact melt sheets are recognized by careful mapping and rock sampling followed by microscopy and geochemical analysis.

Pseudotachylyte and Breccias: Pseudotachylyte is a rock type generated by faulting at either microscopic or macroscopic scales. However, pseudotachylytes are also associated with seismic faulting due to endogenic processes (e.g., earthquakes due to isostatic rebound and plate tectonics), so they are not exclusively impact generated. However, in association with features listed above, they can be a contributory criterion. Pseudotachylyte associated with impact structures may form in radial and concentric fault systems that help to define the megascopic structure of the crater. Pseudotachylytes can be included in a family of rocks referred to as breccias. Many different types of breccia can be developed as part of the impact process (including impact melt breccias listed in (5) above), but breccias can also form by endogenic processes. The interpretation of breccias therefore requires considerable care and experience. Moreover, they should not be considered diagnostic of impact, but rather contributory evidence.
In terms of relative importance, it is generally considered that criteria 1-3 above are definitive (they all relate to the passage of a shock wave through rock and resulting modification processes), with contributory evidence being added by 4-6 (which result from secondary effects, such as gravitationally driven crater modification). For buried structures that cannot be directly accessed, but are well-preserved as revealed by detailed geophysical techniques (especially seismic data), some workers consider this as strong evidence in favour of an impact origin. Normally, buried craters are verified by drilling and sampling the material directly for evaluation using criteria 1-3 above." 
2

 


References:

 

1 Catalogue of Meteorites

by A. L. Graham, A.W.R. Bevan and R. Hutchison, Fourth Edition, The University of Arizona Press, Tucson, Arizona, 1985.

 

2 Earth Impact Database (2007)

http://www.unb.ca/passc/ImpactDatabase/

 

 

last updated 12JAN09