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- Edeowie_glass abstract "Edeowie glass is a slag-like, opaque rare natural glass found as vesicular or in sheet-like masses in a semi-continuous swath in baked sediment, about 55 km long and 10 km wide along the western side of the Flinders Ranges near Parachilna, South Australia and Lake Torrens. The origin of Edeowie glass has been attributed to either lightning strikes, or meteorite or comet impact by its notable features that can be recognized as caused by pressure only exerted by these impact events. The region in which this glass is found is constricted to the locality. It is typically black but has red-brownish colouration occasionally caused by oxidation. Its origin has been dated to about .67 million years ago to .07 million years ago.Edeowie glass does not possess contextual, chemical or physical features distinctive from glassy materials confirmed to have been produced by electrical discharge from lightning. The broad stratigraphic and radiometric age ranges established for these materials, as well as their often convoluted tubaceous propagation structure and ring-like clustering habit of Edeowie glass are consistent with a hypothesis that these putative impact materials are fulgurite slags, which are commonly identified directly East of the Flinders Ranges".
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageExternalLink geodx.strat_units.sch_full?wher=stratno=70182.
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageExternalLink ai_81110075.
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageExternalLink www.meteorite-times.com.
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageExternalLink Jims_Fragments.htm.
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageExternalLink 82(4)gifford.pdf.
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageID "3313203".
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageLength "3284".
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageOutDegree "18".
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageRevisionID "674739142".
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageWikiLink Category:Glass_in_nature.
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageWikiLink Comet.
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageWikiLink Darwin_glass.
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageWikiLink Desert_glass.
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageWikiLink Flinders_Ranges.
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageWikiLink Fulgurite.
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageWikiLink Glass.
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageWikiLink Lake_Torrens.
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageWikiLink Libyan_desert_glass.
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageWikiLink Lightning.
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageWikiLink Meteorite.
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageWikiLink Natural.
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageWikiLink Nature.
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageWikiLink Opacity_(optics).
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageWikiLink Oxidation.
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageWikiLink Parachilna,_South_Australia.
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageWikiLink Redox.
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageWikiLink Sedimentary_rock.
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageWikiLink Slag.
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageWikiLink Vesicular_texture.
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageWikiLinkText "Edeowie glass".
- Edeowie_glass hasPhotoCollection Edeowie_glass.
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Glass-material-stub.
- Edeowie_glass wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Edeowie_glass subject Category:Glass_in_nature.
- Edeowie_glass hypernym Glass.
- Edeowie_glass type Person.
- Edeowie_glass type Type.
- Edeowie_glass type Type.
- Edeowie_glass comment "Edeowie glass is a slag-like, opaque rare natural glass found as vesicular or in sheet-like masses in a semi-continuous swath in baked sediment, about 55 km long and 10 km wide along the western side of the Flinders Ranges near Parachilna, South Australia and Lake Torrens. The origin of Edeowie glass has been attributed to either lightning strikes, or meteorite or comet impact by its notable features that can be recognized as caused by pressure only exerted by these impact events.".
- Edeowie_glass label "Edeowie glass".
- Edeowie_glass sameAs m.04_1rfn.
- Edeowie_glass sameAs Q16966760.
- Edeowie_glass sameAs Q16966760.
- Edeowie_glass wasDerivedFrom Edeowie_glass?oldid=674739142.
- Edeowie_glass isPrimaryTopicOf Edeowie_glass.