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- Q2511795 subject Q8488041.
- Q2511795 subject Q8543088.
- Q2511795 subject Q8766826.
- Q2511795 abstract "Veevers crater is an impact crater located on a flat desert plain between the Great Sandy and Gibson Deserts in the center of the state of Western Australia, Australia. The site is very remote and difficult to visit. The crater was discovered from the air in July 1975 during a government geological survey and named in honor of Australian geologist John Veevers who had worked in the area in the late 1950s. At the time of discovery a meteorite impact origin was suspected, but could not be proven. The subsequent discovery of iron meteorite fragments around the crater by E.M. and C.S. Shoemaker in 1984 removed any doubt about its origin.The crater has a symmetrical bowl-shaped topography and is considered to be one of the best preserved small meteorite craters on Earth. The 20 m wide rim rises about 1.5 m above the plain, while the deepest point of the central depression is 7 m below the rim crest; the rim to rim diameter averages about 70 m. Based on cosmogenic nuclide exposure dating of the crater walls, the crater is less than 20 thousand years old, while the pristine state of preservation of the ejecta has been used to suggest that it may in fact be less than 4 thousand years old.The iron meteorite fragments collected around the crater are classified as a coarse octahedrite belonging to chemical class IIAB; the fragments show considerable evidence of deformation presumably related to the impact explosion. It has been inferred that the original meteorite was in the size range of 100-1000 tonnes, probably closer to the latter, now dispersed as fragments within the crater breccia and ejecta.".
- Q2511795 thumbnail Veevers_crater_August_2011.jpg?width=300.
- Q2511795 wikiPageWikiLink Q1068016.
- Q2511795 wikiPageWikiLink Q108149.
- Q2511795 wikiPageWikiLink Q1321876.
- Q2511795 wikiPageWikiLink Q191250.
- Q2511795 wikiPageWikiLink Q216874.
- Q2511795 wikiPageWikiLink Q2296748.
- Q2511795 wikiPageWikiLink Q231618.
- Q2511795 wikiPageWikiLink Q272577.
- Q2511795 wikiPageWikiLink Q3206.
- Q2511795 wikiPageWikiLink Q326896.
- Q2511795 wikiPageWikiLink Q408.
- Q2511795 wikiPageWikiLink Q55818.
- Q2511795 wikiPageWikiLink Q5971169.
- Q2511795 wikiPageWikiLink Q6261892.
- Q2511795 wikiPageWikiLink Q827989.
- Q2511795 wikiPageWikiLink Q8488041.
- Q2511795 wikiPageWikiLink Q8543088.
- Q2511795 wikiPageWikiLink Q8766826.
- Q2511795 point "-22.97 125.3725".
- Q2511795 type SpatialThing.
- Q2511795 comment "Veevers crater is an impact crater located on a flat desert plain between the Great Sandy and Gibson Deserts in the center of the state of Western Australia, Australia. The site is very remote and difficult to visit. The crater was discovered from the air in July 1975 during a government geological survey and named in honor of Australian geologist John Veevers who had worked in the area in the late 1950s.".
- Q2511795 label "Veevers crater".
- Q2511795 lat "-22.97".
- Q2511795 long "125.3725".
- Q2511795 depiction Veevers_crater_August_2011.jpg.