Reconstructing the terrestrial impact cratering record is a fundamental goal of planetary science. However, erosion, burial, and deformation can obscure or destroy impact records. A sedimentary record of impact is provided by detrital shocked minerals, which have been shown to survive erosion and transport in modern alluvium and Holocene glacial deposits. Here we describe detrital shocked minerals from a known impact structure in sediments that were transported to distal locations and buried. The Rietputs Formation is a Pleistocene fluvial terrace of the Vaal River in South Africa, and shocked minerals were found in the terrace at locations up to 750 km downstream of the 2020 Ma Vredefort impact structure. Optical and electron microscopy, and U-Pb geochronology, were used to establish microstructural and isotopic provenance indicators that demonstrate the detrital shocked minerals originated from the Vredefort impact structure. The Rietputs Formation contains fluvial diamonds and Acheulean (ca. 1.7–1.3 Ma) artifacts at sites such as Canteen Kopje, a South African National Monument. The assemblage of detritus in Rietputs Formation gravels, including shocked minerals from Earth's largest impact structure, diamonds from Cretaceous kimberlites, and Stone Age artifacts, comprises a unique sedimentary archive of the Kaapvaal craton, and may have geoheritage significance.
Meteorite impacts produce shocked minerals in target rocks that record diagnostic high-pressure deformation microstructures unique to hypervelocity processes. When impact craters erode, detrital shocked minerals can be transported by fluvial processes, as has been demonstrated through studies of modern alluvium at some of the largest known impact structures. However, the ultimate fate of distally transported detrital shocked minerals in fluvial systems is not well understood and is an important parameter for constraining the location of a source crater. In South Africa, detrital shocked minerals from the 2020 Ma Vredefort impact structure have been documented in the Vaal River basin, downriver from the structure. Here, we report results of an extensive microstructural survey of detrital zircon from the Orange River basin and the Atlantic coast of South Africa to search for the presence of far-traveled Vredefort-derived detrital shocked zircon grains in different modern sedimentary environments. Three shocked grains were found out of 11 168 grains surveyed (0.03%) by scanning electron microscopy, including two in beach sand on the Atlantic coast and one from a sandbar 15 km upstream from the mouth of the Orange River. Shock-produced {112} twins documented by electron backscatter diffraction in each of the three grains confirm their impact provenance, and U-Pb ages from 3130 to 3040 Ma are consistent with derivation from bedrock at the Vredefort impact structure. These results demonstrate the transport of Vredefort-derived shocked zircon to the coast via the Vaal-Orange river system, which requires 1940 km of fluvial transport from their point source on the Kaapvaal craton to the Atlantic coast passive margin. These results further demonstrate that shocked zircon grains can be detected in detrital populations at abundances <1%, and can ultimately be transported outside their basin of origin when they arrive at continental margins. Detrital shocked zircon thus constitutes long-lived evidence of former impacts, as they retain microstructural evidence of shock deformation, as well as geochemical (U-Th-Pb) fingerprints of their source terrain. The study of detrital shocked minerals uniquely merges impact cratering with sedimentology, as identification of detrital grains with diagnostic shock microstructures in siliciclastic sediments can be applied to search the sedimentary record for evidence of eroded impact structures of any age, from the Phanerozoic to the Hadean, which can aid in reconstructing the impact record of Earth.
Microstructural and geochronological analysis of shocked zircon has greatly advanced understanding the formation and evolution of impact structures. However, fundamental aspects of shock-produced planar microstructures in zircon remain poorly known, such as their deformation mechanisms, crystallographic orientations, and how planar microstructures visible at the grain scale by scanning electron microscopy correlate to microstructures visible at sub-micrometer scales by transmission electron microscopy and electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD). To unify observations of planar microstructures in zircon made at different scales into a consistent framework, we integrate the results of: (1) three-dimensional crystallographic modeling of planar microstructure orientations, with (2) 360° external prism backscattered electron imaging at the grain scale, and (3) polished section cathodoluminescence and EBSD analysis at the sub-micrometer scale for a suite of detrital shocked zircons eroded from the Vredefort Dome in South Africa. Our combined approach resulted in the documentation of seven planar microstructure orientations that can be correlated from grain to sub-micrometer scales of observation: (010), (100), (112), (11̄2), (1̄12), (1̄1̄2), and (011). All orientations of planar microstructures exhibit minor variations in style, however all are considered to be fractures; no amorphous ZrSiO4 lamellae were identified. We therefore favor the usage of "planar fracture" (PF) over "planar deformation feature" (PDF) for describing the observed planar microstructures in zircon based broadly on the nomenclature developed for shocked quartz. Some {112} PFs visible at the grain scale contain impact microtwins detectable by EBSD, and are the first report of polysynthetic twinning in zircon. The microtwins consist of parallel sets of thin lamellae of zircon oriented 65° about <110> and occur in multiple crosscutting {112} orientations within single grains. Curviplanar fractures and injected melt are additional impact-related microstructures associated with PF formation. Crosscutting relations of shock microstructures reveal the following chronology: (1) Early development of c-axis parallel PFs in (010) and (100) orientations; (2) the development of up to four {112} PFs, including some with microtwins; (3) the development of curviplanar fractures and the injection of impact derived melt; (4) the development of (011) PFs associated with compressional deformation; and (5) grain-scale non-discrete crystal plastic deformation. Experimental constraints for the onset of PFs, together with the absence of reidite, suggest formation conditions from 20 to 40 GPa for all of the planar microstructures described here.
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Accessory mineral geochronometers such as zircon, monazite, baddeleyite, and xenotime are increasingly being recognized for their ability to preserve diagnostic microstructural evidence of hypervelocity processes. However, little is known about the response of titanite to shock metamorphism, even though it is a widespread accessory phase and U-Pb geochronometer. Here we report two new mechanical twin modes in titanite within shocked granitoids from the Chicxulub impact structure, Mexico. Titanite grains in the newly acquired International Ocean Discovery Program Site expedition 364 M0077A core preserve multiple sets of polysynthetic twins, most commonly with composition planes (K1), = ~{111}, and shear direction (η1) = , and less commonly with the mode K1 = {130}, η1 = ~ . In some grains, {130} deformation bands have formed concurrently with shock twins, indicating dislocation glide with Burgers vector b = [341] can be active at shock conditions. Twinning of titanite in these modes, the presence of planar deformation features in shocked quartz, and lack of diagnostic shock microstructures in zircon in the same samples highlights the utility of titanite as a shock indicator for a shock pressure range between ~12 and ~17 GPa. Given the challenges of identifying ancient impact evidence on Earth and other bodies, microstructural analysis of titanite is here demonstrated to be a new avenue for recognizing impact deformation in materials where other impact evidence may be erased, altered, or did not manifest due to low shock pressure.