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Chicxulub and the Exploration of Large Peak-
Ring Impact Craters through Scientific Drilling

David A. Kring, Lunar and Planetary Institute, Houston, Texas 77058, USA; Philippe Claeys, Analytical, Environmental and
Geo-Chemistry, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Pleinlaan 2, Brussels 1050, Belgium; Sean P.S. Gulick, Institute for Geophysics and Dept.
of Geological Sciences, Jackson School of Geosciences, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas 78758, USA; Joanna V. Morgan
and Gareth S. Collins, Dept. of Earth Science and Engineering, Imperial College London SW7 2AZ, UK; and the IODP-ICDP
Expedition 364 Science Party.

ABSTRACT                                       proving the structure had an impact origin.           to assess the depth of origin of the peak-
                                               The buried structure was confirmed by                 ring rock types and determine how they
  The Chicxulub crater is the only well-       seismic surveys conducted in 1996 and                 were deformed during the crater-forming
preserved peak-ring crater on Earth and        2005 to be a large ~180–200-km–diameter               event. That information is needed to effec-
linked, famously, to the K-T or K-Pg mass      impact crater with an intact peak ring                tively test how peak-ring craters form on
extinction event. For the first time, geolo-   (Morgan et al., 1997; Gulick et al., 2008).           planetary bodies.
gists have drilled into the peak ring of that
crater in the International Ocean                The discovery of the Chicxulub impact                 The expedition was also designed to
Discovery Program and International            structure initially prompted two scientific           measure any hydrothermal alteration in
Continental Scientific Drilling Program        drilling campaigns. In the mid-1990s, a               the peak ring and physical properties of the
(IODP-ICDP) Expedition 364. The                series of shallow onshore wells up to 700 m           rocks, such as porosity and permeability,
Chicxulub impact event, the environmen-        deep were drilled by the Universidad                  to calibrate geophysical data, test models
tal calamity it produced, and the paleobio-    Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM;                    of impact-generated hydrothermal sys-
logical consequences are among the most        Urrutia-Fucugauchi et al., 1996) to sample            tems, evaluate the habitability of the peak
captivating topics being discussed in the      near-surface impact breccias in the ejecta            ring, and investigate the recovery of life in
geologic community. Here we focus atten-       blanket surrounding the crater. In 2002,              a sterilized portion of Earth’s surface. The
tion on the geological processes that          the International Continental Scientific              recovered rocks also make it possible to
shaped the ~200-km-wide impact crater          Drilling Program (ICDP) also sponsored a              evaluate shock deformation of Earth’s
responsible for that discussion and the        deep drilling project, producing a 1511 m             crust, including the vaporization of rocks
expedition’s first year results.               borehole between the peak ring and the                that may have contributed to climate-alter-
                                               crater rim. Continuous core beneath 404 m             ing effects of the impact. A large number
INTRODUCTION                                   included Tertiary marine sediments, poly-             of geological, environmental, and biologi-
                                               mict impact breccias, an impact melt unit,            cal results will emerge from the expedi-
  The Chicxulub crater (Hildebrand et al.,     and one or more blocks of Cretaceous sedi-            tion. Here, we focus on the planetary geo-
1991) on the Yucatán Peninsula of Mexico       mentary target rocks. We refer readers to             science findings: how the peak-ring crater
was produced by a terminal Cretaceous          two special issues of Meteoritics &                   formed and what peak-ring and multi-ring
impact that has been linked to regional and    Planetary Science (Jull, 2004a, 2004b) for            craters can reveal about deep planetary
global K-T or K-Pg boundary deposits (see      the major results of that ICDP project, but           crusts. As the borehole pierced only a sin-
reviews by Smit, 1999; Kring, 2000, 2007;      note that the project left unresolved,                gle location within the crater, we begin by
Schulte et al., 2010). The subsurface struc-   among other things, the geologic processes            looking at a fully exposed peak-ring crater
ture was initially detected with geophysi-     that produced the peak-ring morphology of             on the Moon, which provides a picture of a
cal techniques (Cornejo Toledo and             the crater.                                           similar structure to that targeted by
Hernandez Osuna, 1950). While exploring                                                              Expedition 364.
the source of those anomalies, Petróleos         The Chicxulub crater is the best-pre-
Mexicanos (PEMEX) drilled three explo-         served peak-ring impact basin on Earth, so            EXPOSED PEAK-RING CRATERS
ration wells (all dry) into the structure.     it is an essential target for additional study.
Petrologic analyses of polymict breccias       The only other known similarly sized sur-               The Schrödinger basin near the south
and melt rock in recovered core samples        viving impact structures, Sudbury and                 pole on the lunar far side is the youngest
revealed shock-metamorphic and shock-          Vredefort, are tectonically deformed and              and best preserved peak-ring crater on the
melted features diagnostic of impact           eroded. Recently, the International Ocean             Moon (Fig. 2A). The ~320-km-diameter
cratering (Kring et al., 1991; Kring and       Discovery Program (IODP) and ICDP                     crater contains an ~150-km-diameter peak
Boynton, 1992; Swisher et al., 1992,           drilled an offshore borehole into the crater          ring that rises up to 2.5 km above the cra-
Sharpton et al., 1992; Claeys et al., 2003),   (Fig. 1), recovering core from a depth of             ter floor (Shoemaker et al., 1994). The
                                               505.7–1334.7 m below the sea floor (mbsf),            peak ring is topographically complex, with

     GSA Today, v. 27, doi: 10.1130/GSATG352A.1. Copyright 2017, The Geological Society of America.

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