Meteoritical Micropaleontology: An Example From the Late
Eocene of Virginia
C. Wylie Poag
Micropaleontology, as applied to the study of meteorite impacts, has come
into sharp focus recently, highlighted by the K-T impact controversy. The
principal applications of microfossils to the K-T problem have been toward
testing the mass extinction hypothesis and interpreting paleoenvironmental
changes across the boundary. Micropaleontology played no role, however, in
identifying the K-T impact crater. In contrast, initial identification of the
late Eocene Chesapeake Bay impact crater arose directly (though inadvertently)
from micropaleontological studies of core samples. The USGS and the Virginia
State Water Control Board, in 1986-89, discovered a unique subsurface breccia
layer (Exmore breccia) at four sites around the lower bay. Microfossils (foraminifera,
bolboformi s, calcareous nannofossils, dinoflagellates, and pollen) showed that
individual clasts in the breccia came from eight different coastal plain
formations ranging in age from Albian to late Eocene. A single sample of the
breccia matrix could contain mixtures of microfossils from all these formations.
Youngest microfossils in the breccia indicate that the unit accumulated in
Biochronozone P15 (planktonic foraminifera) and NP19-20 (nannofossils),
correlative with an impact ejecta layer (containing shocked quartz, tektites,
coesite) cored on the New Jersey continental slope. Graphic correlation between
the
Virginia
and New Jersey sections indicates that normal marine sedimentation
resumed simultaneously in the late Eocene at each location. Subsequent
geophysical and petrographic evidence has onfirmed what the microfossils
originally indicated -- that the Exmore breccia and its source crater are
geological consequences of a hypervelocity bolide impact.
AAPG Search and Discover Article #91019©1996 AAPG Convention and Exhibition 19-22 May 1996, San Diego, California