Abstract

The 455 Ma old Lockne crater in central Sweden is a well-preserved and accessible instance of marine impact crater. The process of formation of the over 7 km wide crater (referred to as inner crater) in crystalline Proterozoic basement is numerically modeled under the assumption of a 45 ∘ oblique impact of an asteroid-like impactor. The 3D version of the SOVA multi-material hydrocode is used to model the shock wave propagation through the target, transient crater growth, material ejection in water and basement target, and water and fragmented rock ejecta expansion. The model results in a crater formation with the greatest ejection and melting transferred in the downrange direction. The model reproduces the growth of the water crater accompanied by the growth of a “wall” of ejected water at its outer margin. The basement ejecta are mostly trapped in this transient “water wall”. Only the largest ejected rock fragments could break through this water wall and thus reach distances farther than about 6 km from the center of the target. The model predicts approximately 0.5 km 3 of impact melt formation, less than 10% of which is ejected outside of the inner (basement) crater, whereas the rest is reckoned to have remained within the inner crater. We assume that most of the ejected melt occurs as sand-sized fragments in the resurge sediments that formed subsequent to the collapse of the water crater that resulted in the powerful backflow of water. The model results are in accordance with several important details of the known geology of the crater. The model also outlines the difference in the marine crater formation processes in contrast to a crater with similar size formed on land.

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