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An
International and Multidisciplinary Drilling Project into a Young
Complex Impact Structure: The 2004 ICDP Bosumtwi Crater Drilling
Project - An Overview
Koeberl,
C., B. Milkereit, J.T. Overpeck, C.A. Scholz, P.Y.O. Amoako, D. Boamah,
S. Danuor, T. Karp, J. Kueck, R.E. Hecky, J.W. King, and J.A. Peck
2007 Meteoritics & Planetary
Science 42:
483-511
ABSTRACT
The Bosumtwi impact crater in Ghana, arguably the best-preserved
complex young impact
structure known on Earth, displays a pronounced rim and is almost completely
filled by Lake
Bosumtwi, a hydrologically closed basin. It is the source crater of
the Ivory Coast tektites. The
structure was excavated in 2.1–2.2 Gyr old metasediments and
metavolcanics of the Birimian
Supergroup. A drilling project was conceived that would combine two
major scientific interests in this
crater: 1) to obtain a complete paleoenvironmental record from the
time of crater formation about one
million years ago, at a near-equatorial location in Africa for which
very few data are available so far,
and 2) to obtain a complete record of impactites at the central uplift
and in the crater moat, for ground
truthing and comparison with other structures.
Within the framework of an international and multidisciplinary drilling
project led by the
International Continental Scientific Drilling Program (ICDP), 16 drill
cores were obtained from June
to October 2004 at six locations within Lake Bosumtwi, which is 8.5
km in diameter. The 14 sediment
cores are currently being investigated for paleoenvironmental indicators.
The two impactite cores
LB-07A and LB-08A were drilled into the deepest section of the annular
moat (540 m) and the flank of
the central uplift (450 m), respectively. They are the main subject
of this special issue of Meteoritics & Planetary Science,
which represents the first detailed presentations of results from the
deep drilling
into the Bosumtwi impactite sequence. Drilling progressed in both cases
through the impact breccia
layer into fractured bedrock. LB-07A comprises lithic (in the uppermost
part) and suevitic impact
breccias with appreciable amounts of impact melt fragments. The lithic
clast content is dominated by
graywacke, besides various metapelites, quartzite, and a carbonate
target component. Shock
deformation in the form of quartz grains with planar microdeformations
is abundant. First chemical
results indicate a number of suevite samples that are strongly enriched
in siderophile elements and Mg,
but the presence of a definite meteoritic component in these samples
cannot be confirmed due to high
indigenous values. Core LB-08A comprises suevitic breccia in the uppermost
part, followed with
depth by a thick sequence of graywacke-dominated metasediment with
suevite and a few granitoid
dike intercalations. It is assumed that the metasediment package represents
bedrock intersected in theflank of the central uplift. Both 7A and
8A suevite intersections differ from suevites outside of the
northern crater rim.
Deep drilling results confirmed the gross structure of the crater as
imaged by the pre-drilling
seismic surveys. Borehole geophysical studies conducted in the two
boreholes confirmed the low
seismic velocities for the post-impact sediments (less than 1800 m/s)
and the impactites (2600–3300 m/s). The impactites exhibit very
high porosities (up to 30 vol%), which has important
implications for mechanical rock stability. The statistical analysis
of the velocities and densities
reveals a seismically transparent impactite sequence (free of prominent
internal reflections).
Petrophysical core analyses provide no support for the presence of
a homogeneous magnetic unit
(= melt breccia) within the center of the structure. Borehole vector
magnetic data point to a patchy
distribution of highly magnetic rocks within the impactite sequence.
The lack of a coherent melt sheet, or indeed of any significant amounts
of melt rock in the crater
fill, is in contrast to expectations from modeling and pre-drilling
geophysics, and presents an
interesting problem for comparative studies and requires re-evaluation
of existing data from other
terrestrial impact craters, as well as modeling parameters.
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