Abstract

From orbital, aviation and geologic documents, four circular depressions on the Sahara sedimentary platform were selected for field investigation because of their possible impact origin. Our results can be summarized as follows: Amguid Crater (26° 05′N; 004° 23.5′E; 450 m diameter, 30 m deep) is perfectly circular, with a steep wall, a raised rim and an ejecta blanket. The strata are uplifted, outward dipping, dislocated and locally overturned at the rim crest. Large blocks are scattered around the rim. There is petrological evidence of shock by planar elements in quartz. Amguid is a well preserved impact crater probably no older than 100,000 years. Talemzane (33° 19′N; 004° 02′E; 1.7 km diameter, 70 m deep) is also perfectly circular and displays a raised rim. The strata are uplifted, outward dipping, and locally highly fractured. Numerous breccia veins are clearly exposed in the crater wall. Consolidated ejected debris form a continuous blanket more than 500 m outward from the rim. Reworked mixed breccias are exposed at the base of the crater wall. Planar elements are observed in quartz clasts in the mixed breccia. Talemzane is an impact crater on the order of 0.5 to 3 million years old. El Mouilah (33° 51′N; 002° 03′E; 4.5 km diameter, 130 m deep) is almost perfectly circular, the walls are steep and there is a central dome. In spite of a promising morphology, there is no field evidence of impact. El Mouilah is possibly a recent collapse structure due to dissolution in the thick underlying limestone and gypsum formations or purely erosional in origin. Aflou (34° 00′N; 002° 03′E) is not circular (3 × 5 km) but was selected because it appears in the literature as a probable impact crater, the main argument being the existence of fused materials in the center (Marks et al., 1972). We found no evidence of impact, but several occurrences of igneous rocks along an E‐W direction suggest a structurally controlled volcanic activity. A volcanic activity is also supported by the existence of a local magnetic anomaly centered on the depression. Aflou is neither an impact structure nor a crater. Located on a probable structural dome, at the intersection of several structural trends, the formation of the depression can be due to erosion and/or dissolution in the thick underlying limestone and gypsum formations.

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