Kalkkop crater explained

Kalkkop crater
Map:South Africa
Confidence:Confirmed
Age:0.25 ± 0.05 Ma
Exposed:Yes
Drilled:Yes
Country:South Africa
Province:Eastern Cape Province
Municipality:Aberdeen, Eastern Cape

Kalkkop is an impact crater which can be found on a private farm south east of the town of Aberdeen, Eastern Cape, in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa. The name is derived from two Afrikaans words, namely "kalk" meaning limestone and "kop" meaning head.[1]

The meteorite impact occurred about 250,000 years ago (Pleistocene) on what is now the flat Karoo landscape. It left a crater 640 metres in diameter and a few hundred metres deep. Over time, draining water left a limestone deposit 88 metres deep. This lies over a breccia layer a further 210 metres deep. Only a weathered circular ridge is still visible at the surface.

This is one of four confirmed impact sites in South Africa and six within the Southern African region.[2]

References

-32.7081°N 24.4322°W

Notes and References

  1. Kalkkop. 2009-08-15.
  2. Africa. 2017-05-04.