Mars Mercury Venus Earth’s Moon (S. Pole)
Mistastan Lake, New Foundland, Canada 28 Km 38,000 years
Barringer Meteor Crater, AZ 1.18 km 49,000 years
Wolf Creek, Australia Km 300,000 years
Bosumtwi, Nigeria 10.5 Km 1.3 Million years
Roter, South Africa 2.5 km 5 Million years
Karakul, Tadjikistan 45 Km < 10 Ma
Chicxulub, Mex 170 Km 65 Ma
Clearwater Lakes, Sask. 32 km/22km 290 Million years Deep Bay, Sask. 13 km 100 Million years
Gosses Bluss, Australia 22 km Million years
Aorounga, Chad 17 km 200 Million years
Manicougan Lake, Quebec 100 km 212 Million years
Radar Image of NEO 1999JM8 Missed Earth by 5 million km in 1990, 6 million km in 1999 Average diameter 3.5 km
80 million trees knocked down over 2,150 square kilometres (830 square miles Tunguska Event, 1908, Russia
Tunguska Event 1908 Equivalent to a 100 MT Nuclear Bomb Blast
Question If cratering rate on Earth is same as our Moon, why are their so few craters preserved?
What is wrong here?
Apollo 14 site spherules (~ 0.2 mm diameter) Argon40/Argon39 dates (accuracy ~ +/- 200 MY)
Apollo 14 site spherules (~ 200 micro-meters diameter) Argon40/Argon39 dates (accuracy ~ +/- 200 MY) => 26 Ma periodicity
1 BY averaging bins Black and opaque spherules only
Question: If cratering rate on Earth is same as our Moon, why are their so few craters preserved? Answer: Erosion