Skip to content
Ekspedycje fotograficzne i zaćmieniowe
  • Home
    • Relacje
      • USA 2019 – Landscapes of the West Workshop
      • Australia 2014
      • Australia i Nowa Zelandia 2012 – Całkowite zaćmienie Słońca
      • USA 2012 – Obrączkowe Zaćmienie Słońca
      • Chiny 2009 – Całkowite Zaćmienie Słońca
      • Galeria
    • Atlas
      • USA – Hawaje
      • Australia
        • Gosses Bluff
        • Narodowy Park Morski Dwunastu Apostołów
        • Park Narodowy Watarrka
        • Park Narodowy West MacDonnell
        • Rezerwat kraterów meteorytowych Henbury
      • Indonezja
        • Borobudur
        • Prambanan
      • Nowa Zelandia – śladami Władcy Pierścieni
        • Park Narodowy Abel Tasman
        • Park Narodowy Fiordland
        • Park Narodowy Tongariro
      • USA – część kontynentalna
        • Fala (the Wave) i rezerwat kanionu Paria oraz Cynobrowych Klifów
        • Kanion Antylopy
        • Kanion Havasu
        • Park Narodowy Bryce Canyon
        • Park Narodowy Capitol Reef
        • Park Narodowy Doliny Śmierci (Death Valley)
        • Park Narodowy Zion
  • Trips and Events
    • Calendar – Past events
      • Total Eclipse Expedition
        • Solar Eclipse Expedition in Australia and New Zealand
      • Annular Eclipse Expedition
        • Annular Eclipse over Yucatan in Mexico 2023
      • Photographic expedition
        • Highlands of Iceland 2023 – Photography Workshop
      • Total Solar Eclipse in Chile, July 2nd, 2019
      • Zaćmienie obrączkowe – Malezja 2019
      • Total Solar Eclipse in Chile, July 2nd, 2019
      • Photoexpedition – USA 2019 Southwest
      • Photoexpedition – USA 2019 Northwest
      • Photoexpedition – USA 2018
      • Wyprawa fotograficzna – zachodnie USA 2018
      • Grand Tour USA 2018 – Group is complete!
      • Obrączkowe zaćmienie Słońca – Patagonia 2017
      • Całkowite zaćmienie Słońca USA 2017 już za rok
      • Całkowite zaćmienie Słońca – USA 2017
      • Obrączkowe zaćmienie Słońca – Madagaskar 2016
      • Całkowite zaćmienie Słońca – Indonezja – 2016
      • Landscape Photography Workshop – USA – Hawai’i 2017
    • Aktualne wyprawy
  • Informacje ogólne…
    • Przygotowanie do wyprawy – informacje ogólne
    • Fotografowanie zaćmień
    • Tramping… co to jest i z czym to się je
    • Opinie
      • Subskrybuj wiadomości eclipses.eu
      • Ciasteczka

Gosses Bluff

Gosses Bluff



3D animation showing Gosses Bluff crater remnants in Australia.

Gosses Bluff (Gosse’s Bluff) is thought to be the eroded remnant of central uplift of larger impact crater. It is located in the southern Northern Territory, near the centre of Australia, about 175 km west of Alice Springs and about 212 km to the northeast of Uluru. The original crater is thought to have been formed by the impact of an asteroid or comet approximately 142.5 ± 0.8 million years ago, very close to the Jurassic – Cretaceous boundary. The original crater rim has been estimated at about 22 km in diameter, but this has been eroded away. The 5 km diameter, 180 m high crater-like feature, still visible, is interpreted as the eroded relic of the crater’s central uplift. The impact origin of this topographic feature was first proposed in the 1960s, the strongest evidence coming from the abundance of shatter cones. In the past the crater has been the target of petroleum exploration, and two abandoned exploration wells lie near its centre.

2012-11-04_0408-00005
2012-11-04_0408-00008
2012-11-04_0408-00011

The bolide struck a flat land surface that was higher than the present surface. The explosion on impact could only be described as cataclysmic, completely vaporising the bolide, sending up a mushroom cloud, similar to that produced by the detonation of a nuclear bomb, thousands of metres into the atmosphere. It has been estimated that the energy of the impact would have been at least 200,000 times that of the Hiroshima atomic bomb. As well as devastating thousands of square kilometres around the impact it is believed it would have been felt globally.

The size of the impacting bolide is unknown but it is thought that it must have been travelling at about 70 km/second. It is thought the bolide penetrated less than 600 m below the surface before vaporising but the impact was so great that breakage of rock strata deeper than 4 km occurred. The impact caused very severe compression followed by rebound which produced a very large crater (20-25 km across) and brought the central core rocks to the surface from thousands of metres below. The rocks of the central section came from 3000+ m below the surface and those of the outer section from about 200 m. It has been estimated that the present surface is about 2 km lower than the original impact surface.

The rim, 180 m above the surrounding plain, is bounded by steep cliffs. The depression in the centre of the structure is only slightly above the level of the surrounding plain, on the northern edge of the Amadeus Basin, a syncline with a flat floor comprised of strata dated to the Proterozoic and Palaeozoic, about 8 km thick. On the northeast side of the crater the rim has been breached by stream erosion. On the crest of the rim, about 900 m above sea level, there is an ancient erosion surface that is believed to be of Late Cretaceous or Tertiary age.

Evidence implicating a meteorite impact, according to Twidale & Campbell, includes sediments that are steeply dipping and locally overturned, many shatter cones, deformation lamellae, as well as planar features in quartz, strongly brecciated sediments, that include fragments up to tens of metres in diameter, and devitrified glass. There are also gravity and magnetic anomalies over Gosses Bluff similar to those from other structures that are presumed to be impact structures. The most recent rocks deformed by the impact have been dated to the Late Devonian, absolute age determinations giving an age of about 144 Ma, in the Late Jurassic.

The remnant crater was named Gosses Range by the explorer Ernest Giles in 1872 after H. Gosse, a fellow of the Royal Society.

To the Western Arrernte Aboriginal people this site is known as Tnorala, and is a sacred place w. It is now located in the Tnorala Conservation Reserve. A Western Arrernte story attributes its origins to a cosmic impact: in the Dreaming, a group of celestial women were dancing as stars in the Milky Way. One of the women grew tired and placed her baby in a wooden basket. As the women continued dancing, the basket fell and plunged into the earth. The baby fell to the earth and forced the rocks upward, forming the circular mountain range. The baby’s parents, the evening and morning star, continue to search for their baby to this day.

Sources:

  • Wikipedia
  • Parks and Wildlife Commision NT
  • Australia: The Land Where Time Began

Przeczytaj również:

  • 0083
    Highlands of Iceland 2023 - Photography Workshop
  • DSC_2643
    Highlands of Iceland 2023 - Photography Workshop - raport
  • DSC_3455
    Solar Eclipse in Iceland - 2026 Expedition
  • DSC_5969
    Annular Eclipse over Yucatan in Mexico 2023 raport part 1
  • mexico-g95123817c_1920
    Annular Eclipse over Yucatan in Mexico 2023

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

           

Categories

  • Current Expeditons
  • Total Solar Eclipse
    • 2009
    • 2012
    • 2016
    • 2019
    • 2026
  • Film
  • Hybrid Solar Eclipse
    • 2013
  • Locations
    • Australia
    • Chile
    • China
    • Dania
    • Finlandia
    • Gabon
    • Hawaje
    • Islandia
    • Litwa
    • Łotwa
    • Madagaskar
    • Meksyk
    • Norwegia
    • New Zealand
    • Szwecja
    • USA
  • nurkowanie
  • Annular Solar Eclipse
    • 2012
    • 2013
    • 2016
    • 2023
    • 2024
  • Recommended
  • Trailblazing
  • Report
  • Venus Transit
  • Warsztaty Fotograficzne
    • 2013
    • 2014
    • 2015
    • 2016
    • 2017
    • 2018
    • 2020
    • 2023
    • 2024
  • Zaćmienie częściowe Słońca
  • Completed
  • Northern Lights

(Polski) Szukaj lotów

(Polski) Kontakt

Tomasz L. Czarnecki

Cisowa 18

42-677 Szałsza

phone +48 604 443 041Tomasz L. Czarnecki

Cisowa 18

42-677 Szałsza

phone +48 604 443 041Tomasz L. Czarnecki

ul. Chałubińskiego 31

44-100 Gliwice

phone +604 443 041

Szukaj lotów

Aktualności

  • Solar Eclipse in Iceland – 2026 Expedition
  • Wild West USA 2024 – Southwest
  • Easter Island and Solar Eclipse 2024
  • Annular Eclipse over Yucatan in Mexico 2023 raport part 1
  • Great North American Eclipse 2024

Nasi partnerzy

  • Galeria autorska dfoto
  • Projektowanie stron
  • Guru Shots
  • Polski (pl)Polski
  • English (en)English
  • Українська (ua)Українська
  • Deutsch (de)Deutsch
  • Italiano (it)Italiano
  • Español (es)Español
  • Français (fr)Français

Theme by Colorlib Powered by WordPress
This website uses cookies
Ta strona wykorzystuje pliki cookies (niewielkie pliki tekstowe przechowywane przez przeglądarkę internetową na urządzeniu użytkownika) m.in. do analizy statystycznej ruchu, dopasowania wyglądu i treści strony do indywidualnych potrzeb użytkownika itp. Pozostawiając w ustawieniach przeglądarki włączoną obsługę plików cookies wyrażasz zgodę na ich użycie. Jeśli nie zgadzasz się na wykorzystanie plików cookies zmień ustawienia swojej przeglądarki. Więcej znajdziesz w Dowiedz się więcej. Kliknij Akceptuję jeżeli się zgadzasz na wykorzystanie ciasteczek.
Cookie Info

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience.
Necessary
Always Enabled
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Non-necessary
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.
SAVE & ACCEPT