Hiawatha Impact Crater, Greenland

avatar
(Edited)

img_0.22937498710760992.jpg

The Hiawatha Impact Crater in Greenland has stirred the imagination of many historians, geologists, and theologians worldwide.

(Unsupported https://lbry.tv/$/embed/hiawatha-earth-approach-simulation/0d28451d5293b72a0a764bda6d1b134d6dee6017?r=Avnb9CE8xHHQ9TPsNSA4tk2XXKhze8fq)

An international team of researchers that includes a NASA glaciologist has discovered a 19-mile-wide meteorite impact crater hiding beneath more than half a mile of ice in northwest Greenland. This is the first impact crater of any size ever found under the polar ice sheets. The group, led by researchers from the Centre for GeoGenetics at the Natural History Museum of Denmark, University of Copenhagen, worked for the past three years to verify their discovery, which was initially made in 2015 using NASA data. Their finding is described in a study published on Nov. 14 in the journal Science Advances. The crater is roughly a thousand feet deep and more than 19 miles in diameter, encompassing an area slightly larger than that comprised inside the Capital Beltway around Washington, D.C. Its dimensions place it among the 25 largest impact craters on Earth. The crater formed when an iron meteorite more than half a mile wide smashed into northwest Greenland – but the timing of when the event happened remains a key question and one the researchers want to answer next. The authors put the range between less than 3 million years ago and as recently as less than 13,000 years ago. The resulting depression has since been covered by ice. This narrated video outlines the discovery and includes data visualizations which can be found here: https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/4572

Footage and co-production courtesy of the National History Museum of Denmark/University of Copenhagen, the Underground Channel, and the Alfred Wegener Institute.

Music credit: "Timelapse Variations - Remixed." Natalie Draper, Composer. Original recording: Symphony Number One, SNOtone Records. Dan Rorke, Audio Engineer. Jordan Smith, Music Director.

The conceptual animations showing the meteor's approach, impact, and aftermath can be found below.

Source : https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/12941

(Unsupported https://lbry.tv/$/embed/hiawatha-impact-simulation-nasa/ecede50d7200bbd55e5937fa770b05cbd9d01254?r=Avnb9CE8xHHQ9TPsNSA4tk2XXKhze8fq)
(Unsupported https://lbry.tv/$/embed/hiawatha-surface-light-nasa/86fedbc76a7fcebb7e01f411ef922354f554b5fc?r=Avnb9CE8xHHQ9TPsNSA4tk2XXKhze8fq)
(Unsupported https://lbry.tv/$/embed/hiawatha-impact-simulation-ground-nasa/eab68c67883593df6efc5d17be9e486bdd9e4f5a?r=Avnb9CE8xHHQ9TPsNSA4tk2XXKhze8fq)

Interesting fact: this Comet was large enough to cause the cataclysm for The Great Flood, from the Bible. Should it be determined that the later end of the estimated impact time (13,000 B.P.), some serious speculation will start to occur in the scientific community about the origins of man.

We will be covering this story as it develops around the world, it has been kept out of the main stream eye, and this Comet along with other taboo geology such as Globekli Tepe will be curated on our network.

footer banner.png

@non-partisan ~ A SourceFor News and Current EventsWithout a Political Bias
nonpartisan news logo.pngblockchain lock hive logo.pngneeds hive power.png
Hive Blockchain Social NetworkCensorship Resistant MediaJoin Hive Today.


0
0
0.000
1 comments
avatar

Congratulations @non-partisan! You have completed the following achievement on the Hive blockchain and have been rewarded with new badge(s) :

You received more than 300 upvotes. Your next target is to reach 400 upvotes.

You can view your badges on your board and compare yourself to others in the Ranking
If you no longer want to receive notifications, reply to this comment with the word STOP

0
0
0.000