The Boltysh Crater is an impact crater (astrobleme) in Ukraine. It is 24 km in diameter and its age is estimated to be 65.17±0.64 million years. This age is almost exactly the same as that of the Chicxulub Crater in Mexico, and the KT boundary. The Chicxulub impact is believed to have caused the mass extinction at the end of the Cretaceous era, which included the extinction of the dinosaurs.
As well as Boltysh, the United Kingdom's Silverpit crater and several other craters around the world have estimated ages of about 65 million years, leading to the suggestion that the Earth was struck by multiple impactors at that time. The collision of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 with Jupiter in 1994 showed that such multiple impacts over a few days are possible.
The crater contains a central uplift about 6 km in diameter, rising about 550 m above the base level of the crater. It currently lies beneath about 500 m of sediment deposited since the impact, and was discovered in the 1960s during prospecting for oil in the region.
Later radiometric dating constrained the age further. The concentration of Uranium-238 decay products in impact glasses from the crater was used to derive an age of 65.04±1.10 million years, the first indication that it was of similar age to the Chicxulub Crater. Analysis of Argon radioactive decay products yielded an age of 65.17±0.64 million years.
However, the subsequent discovery of the Silverpit crater and its dating to approximately the same epoch gives greater weight to the theory that the Earth was struck by multiple impactors at this time. The dating of these impact craters is not yet accurate enough to establish whether the multiple impactors arrived over several thousand years, as part of a generally elevated rate of impacts at that time, or were almost simultaneous, like the impacts of the fragments of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 on Jupiter in 1994.
Another crater to form at the same time was the Shiva crater.
Astroblemes | Craters of Ukraine | Cretaceous craters | Paleocene craters
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