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6.6: Cosmogenous Sediments

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    45546
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    Most meteorites that enter the Earth’s atmosphere are destroyed before reaching the surface. As they burn up, the meteorites form particles that rain out onto the land and ocean and are eventually incorporated into sediments. These cosmogenous particles contribute only minor amounts of material to ocean sediments compared to biogenous, lithogenous, and hydrogenous sources. Nevertheless, the total input of meteorite dust to ocean sediments is estimated to be tens of thousands of tonnes each year.

    Two types of meteorites hit the Earth: stony and iron-rich. The dust from the meteorites is found in sediment as cosmic spherules, which are spherical particles that show the effects of having been melted as they pass through the atmosphere. Stony meteorites form silicate spherules that are difficult to distinguish from lithogenous sediment grains. Most iron-rich spherules are about 0.2 to 0.3 mm in diameter and are magnetic, which makes them easier to find.

    Recent studies have focused on finding the impact craters and debris from large meteorites that were not destroyed in the atmosphere but instead struck the oceans. A particularly large meteorite may have landed in the Caribbean Sea or the Gulf of Mexico 65 million years ago. That impact is discussed later in this chapter.


    6.6: Cosmogenous Sediments is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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