Abstract (eng)
The late Eocene Chesapeake Bay impact structure is 35.3 Myr old and ~85 km in diameter. Three stacked cores (A, B, and C) were drilled to a total depth of 1766 m in years 2005–2006 at Eyreville Farm, Northampton County, Virginia, USA, located in the central moat of the impact structure. The project was a joint International Continental Drilling Program (ICDP) and U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) collaboration. This thesis presents investigations of 166 samples of impactites from Eyreville cores A and B. All samples were described macro- and microscopically and their major and trace element composition was determined. Further work was focused on the impact breccia interval (1397–1551 m depth) and the overlying gravelly sand interval (1371–1397 m depth).
The impact breccia interval consists mostly of suevite, but two thin layers of impact melt rock were found in the upper part of the interval and large blocks of cataclastic gneiss occur in the lower part. The impact breccia interval has been divided into six subunits based on the differences in content of matrix, melt, and clasts of different lithologies. Generally the abundance of lithic clasts increases and amount of melt particles decreases with increasing depth. The bottom part is a ground surge breccia, whereas towards the top the fallback material becomes more abundant and is dominant in the uppermost part of the interval. Various shock metamorphic and related effects were noted in the impact breccias, including rare planar fractures (PFs) and abundant planar deformation features (PDFs) in quartz, common “toasted” appearance of quartz, occasional ballen silica, rare PDFs in feldspar, and kink banding in mica.
Shock metamorphic effects were studied in detail. The proportion of shocked quartz grains (grains displaying PFs and/or PDFs) was investigated in clasts of different lithologies from the impact breccia interval. No linear trend with depth was found, although the highly shocked clasts become generally less abundant with depth. More important differences were found among clasts of different lithologies, e.g., mostly minimally shocked clasts from the crystalline basement versus abundant highly shocked clasts from the overlying sedimentary rocks. In addition, the crystallographic orientations of PDFs were determined (using universal stage measurements) in quartz grains of several clasts.
The polymict impactites show a decrease in the SiO2 content and slight increases of the TiO2, Al2O3, and Fe2O3 abundances, with depth. This is in agreement with an increase of the schist/gneiss component with depth. Siderophile element concentrations are lower than in, e.g., the target schists, and do not indicate the presence of an extraterrestrial component. Geochemical harmonic least square mixing (HMX) calculations suggest that the main components of the polymict impactites of the impact breccia interval are basement-derived rocks (gneiss/schist) together with a significant sedimentary component (probably derived mainly from the Cretaceous Potomac Formation) and possibly a pegmatite/granite and amphibolite component.
Melt particles were grouped into six different types, primarily based on their appearance under optical microscope (e.g., color, shape, inclusions). Some common melt types occur over a wide depth range, whereas other types are found only in the impact melt rock intervals. Several melt particles of each type were analyzed by electron microprobe. Average composition of each melt type was determined and possible precursors were discussed. The observations, including HMX calculations, suggest a predominance of sedimentary precursors. Mineral phases in the melt (i.e., undigested clasts, quench crystals, as well as secondary phases) were analyzed by electron microprobe and microRaman spectrometry.
The gravelly sand interval of the Eyreville drill core consists of grayish, poorly sorted and poorly consolidated sand. The matrix comprises 30 to 40 vol% and includes clasts of mostly mono- and polycrystalline quartz and less abundant K-feldspar. Other minerals are only accessory. The main clay fraction components are smectite and kaolinite. The gravelly sand is non-marine, as indicated by the absence of marine microfossils and glauconite. The composition is very silica-rich (>80 wt% of SiO2). Results of our investigations are in agreement with the hypothesis that the gravelly sand interval was formed by an avalanche during the crater modification and the material originated from the non-marine Potomac Formation.
The Eyreville core impactites represent a complex series of depositional events following the shallow-marine Chesapeake Bay impact event. Probably all the lithologies in the core are allochthonous. The deposition mechanism of the impactites changed from ground-surge to fallout, which was soon interrupted by rock avalanches and resurge of the ocean water with sediments. Shock metamorphism effects are present in the impact and resurge breccias, but the allochthonous crystalline blocks are unshocked.