Vargeão Dome | |
Map: | Brazil |
Location: | Paraná Basin |
Coordinates: | -26.815°N -52.17°W |
Confidence: | Confirmed |
Diameter: | 12km (07miles) |
Depth: | 225m (738feet) |
Age: | 123 ± 2 Ma Early Cretaceous |
Exposed: | Yes |
Drilled: | No |
Country: | Brazil |
State: | Santa Catarina |
Municipality: | Vargeão, Faxinal dos Guedes, Passos Maia |
Vargeão Dome is a meteorite crater in Santa Catarina State, Brazil, straddling the municipalities of Vargeão, Faxinal dos Guedes, and Passos Maia.[1]
The crater is an almost perfectly circular depression with steep walls, 12km (07miles) in diameter and up to 225m (738feet) deep, relative to its rim. It is of Early Cretaceous age,[2] or about 123 ± 2 Ma.[1]
The meteorite impacted on the basaltic rocks of the Serra Geral Formation (Jurassic/Cretaceous). The crater displays several concentric rings and radial faults, and an eroded central bulge. The latter consists of impact breccias and sandstones from the Botucatu/Pirambóia Formation (Cretaceous/Triassic), which have been displaced about 700m (2,300feet) above their mean depth in the surrounding area. At least four post-impact lava flows have been identified between the rim and core. The impact origin of the structure is attested by the presence of shatter cones and shocked quartz grains.
In 1978, Brazilian geologists A. Paiva Filho, C.A.V. Andrade and L.F. Scheibe[3] identified an anomalous circular structure in radar images produced by the RADAMBRASIL survey, and called it the Vargeão Dome. In the early 1980s, E. Barbour Jr. and W.A.G. Correa[4] studied the structure in detail, in the context of oil/gas surveys of the area, and proposed a volcanic/tectonic origin for the structure. In 1982, Á. P. Crósta and A. Paiva Filho identified it as an impact crater.[5] Shocked quartz was identified by M. V. Coutinho in 1987, and the occurrence of maskelynite glass was reported by J. Hachiro and others in 1993 [6]
The area around and inside the crater has been heavily farmed since the end of the 19th century; Vargeão's city hall is located inside the crater, near the southern rim. Nevertheless, the crater is still well-preserved. The local population is well aware of the impact origin of the structure, to the point that the town's official nickname is Meteor City.