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Upper Eocene impactites of the US east coast: depositional origins, biostratigraphic framework, and correlation

January 1, 1995

Similar successions of planktonic foraminifera, calcareous nannofossils, and bolboformids document coeval deposition of the Exmore impact breccia (Virginia Coastal Plain) and an impact ejecta layer at DSDP Site 612 (New Jersey Continental Slope). Both impactites accumulated in the late Eocene during the early part of biochrons P15 (planktonic foraminifera) and NP 19-20 (calcareous nannofossils), approximately 35.5-35.2 Ma. The impactite at Site 612 is part of an allochthonous debriite, 22.8 cm thick, displaced from the Toms Canyon impact crater, 40 km north-northwest of Site 612. The Exmore breccia, possibly 2000 m thick, is composed of debris displaced from the Chesapeake Bay impact crater, located in southeastern Virginia, 330 km southwest of Site 612. -Authors

Publication Year 1995
Title Upper Eocene impactites of the US east coast: depositional origins, biostratigraphic framework, and correlation
Authors C. W. Poag, M.-P. Aubry
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Palaios
Index ID 70018950
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center