Article 705WH Huge crater under North Sea was created by asteroid impact, scientists say

Huge crater under North Sea was created by asteroid impact, scientists say

by
Mark Brown North of England correspondent
from Science | The Guardian on (#705WH)

Silverpit crater off Yorkshire coast was caused by cathedral-sized asteroid that set off 100-metre tsunami 43m years ago

Deep below the seabed, 80 miles off the coast of Yorkshire, is a remarkable crater that has divided scientists - was it, thrillingly, created by an asteroid crash? Or more mundanely was it the result of geological salt movements?

Today, the decades-long scientific debate can be settled. The Silverpit crater 700 metres below the seabed under the North Sea was in all likelihood created by a direct hit from an asteroid or comet about the size of York Minster that hurtled towards the Earth more than 43m years ago.

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