Aerial perspective showing Wolfe Creek Meteorite Crater, Western Australia, Australia Abstract Aerial Art/Getty Images The "major planetary event" would have resulted in a crater more than 60 ...
The discovery bolsters the theory that meteorite impacts played an important role in Earth's early geological history ...
It was a respectable tenure, but the world’s oldest known meteorite site is no longer western Australia’s 2.2 billion-year-old, 43-mile-wide Yarrabubba crater. Researchers at Curtin University ...
Scientists have discovered the world’s oldest known meteorite impact crater. Located in Western Australia, the crater has been dated to about 3.5 billion years ago, at a time when these almost ...
We have discovered the oldest meteorite impact crater on Earth, in the very heart of the Pilbara region of Western Australia.
THE world's oldest-known crater from an ... that there was a massive meteor impact around 3.6 billion years ago in the area. They called the region in north-west Australia the Pilbara Craton ...
Scientists in Australia have discovered the world's oldest known meteorite impact crater in northwestern Australia, estimated to be 3.47 billion years old. This finding challenges previous ...
Australian scientists have discovered the world's oldest known meteorite impact ... to a study. The crater, found in the Pilbara area, a remote part of northwestern Australia, "significantly ...
The discovery of a massive crater ... meteorite more than three billion years ago is changing the way scientists view the history of Earth and the planet's stages of evolution. Researchers in ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results