Abstract

The Vredefort impact structure in South Africa is deeply eroded to its lowermost levels. However, granophyre (impact melt) dykes in such structures preserve clasts of supracrustal rocks, transported down from the uppermost levels of the initial structure. Studying these clasts is the only way to understand the properties of already eroded impactites. One such lithic clast from the Vredefort impact structure contains a thin pseudotachylite vein and is shown to be derived from the near-surface environment of the impact crater. Traditionally, impact pseudotachylites are referred to as in situ melt rocks with the same chemical and isotopic composition as their host rocks. The composition of the sampled pseudotachylite vein is not identical to its host rock, as shown by the micro-X-ray fluorescence (µXRF) and energy-dispersive X-ray (EDX) spectrometry mapping. Mapping shows that the melt transfer and material mixing within pseudotachylites may have commonly occurred at the upper levels of the structure. The vein is spatially related to shocked zircon and monazite crystals in the sample. Granular zircons with small granules are concentrated within and around the vein (not farther than 6–7 mm from the vein). Zircons with planar fractures and shock microtwins occur farther from the vein (6–12 mm). Zircons with microtwins (65°/{112}) are also found inside the vein, and twinned monazite (180°/[101]) is found very close to the vein. These spatial relationships point to elevated shock pressure and shear stress, concentrated along the vein’s plane during impact.

Highlights

  • IntroductionHaving been deeply eroded during 2020 My of its history, it allows investigation of the impactites at the lowest levels of this large impact structure [1,2,3,4,5]

  • The Vredefort impact structure is amongst the largest impact basins known on Earth

  • The clast is shocked and thermally reworked within impact melt; there is a possibility that it could be a fragment of meta-sedimentary rock with granitic composition, such as sandstone cemented by clay

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Summary

Introduction

Having been deeply eroded during 2020 My of its history, it allows investigation of the impactites at the lowest levels of this large impact structure [1,2,3,4,5]. Impact-related pseudotachylites, formed at 8–10 km below the original level of the Vredefort structure, have been investigated in detail; their geochemical, isotopic, and (micro)structural properties have been studied continuously for over a century [4,6,7,8,9,10,11,12]. The properties of the impactites formed in Vredefort at the higher structural levels, closer to the original surface, are practically unknown, with the upper portions of the structure being eroded [13,14]. The granophyre melt incorporated various lithic clasts of the country rock, many preserved within the Minerals 2020, 10, 1053; doi:10.3390/min10121053 www.mdpi.com/journal/minerals

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