Study finds impact craters could have fostered early life
A Curtin University-funded study has revealed that even comparatively small meteorite impact craters might have played a key role in the origin and evolution of early life. Curtin University researcher Dr Fred Jourdan co-authored the paper, which suggests heat generated by an asteroid impact takes at least several hundred thousand years to cool down, providing an ideal environment for microbial life to thrive. Read more
Lappajärvi is a lake in Finland, in the municipalities of Lappajärvi, Alajärvi and Vimpeli. It is formed in a 23 km wide meteorite crater. The age of the crater is estimated to be 73.3 million years old (±5.3 million years) - the upper Cretaceous period. Read more