Researchers developed a more accurate simulation of the impact that formed Earth's largest crater -- Vredefort crater -- nearly two billion years ago. They found the impactor (most likely an asteroid) ...
The impactor that formed the Vredefort crater, Earth’s largest, about two billion years ago, was probably much bigger than previously believed—and would have had devastating consequences, a new study ...
South Africa's Vredefort crater, the Earth's largest proven meteorite impact site, defies the typical circular depression ...
Vredefort Dome, approximately 120 km south-west of Johannesburg, is a representative part of a larger meteorite impact structure, or astrobleme. Dating back 2,023 million years, it is the oldest ...
A team of five scientists from the University of the Free State is about to undertake research into the destruction caused by the Vredefort Crater meteorite. The ancient meteorite could hold clues ...
The alternative text for this image may have been generated using AI. To better define the length scale of the dispersion, we compared the magnetization directions between two samples cut from the ...
Jacolene Wales, Prof. Roger Gibson, and Ricart Boneschans, together with Werda Visser, Tilla Odendaal and Sandra Uys from Parys Info & Tourism with one of the posters that Prof. Gibson handed to the ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. David Bressan is a geologist who covers curiosities about Earth. Sep 27, 2022, 08:31am EDT Sep 27, 2022, 09:15am EDT This article ...
Vredefort Dome, approximately 120 km south-west of Johannesburg, is a representative part of a larger meteorite impact structure, or astrobleme. Dating back 2,023 million years, it is the oldest ...
It witnessed the biggest bang in the history of the world. The Vredefort Dome in South Africa marks the spot where, 2bn years ago, a meteorite around 10km (6 miles) in diameter smashed into the earth.
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