Catalog Number:
401457
Object/Specimen Description:

This is a limestone shatter cone with fossil. Shatter cone describes the fan-shaped fracture lines featured on the rock, which are a result from high pressure, high velocity shock wave from a large impacting object or large explosion. This rock measures roughly 22 cm x 7 cm x 15 cm. It is light in color and the fossil is a darker gray than the rest of the rock. On one side of specimen is written "8BC" or "88C".

Specimen Count:
1
Collector:
A. Blankenbicker
Precise Locality:

Kentland Quarry

Locality:
US Great Lakes (MN, WI, IL, IN, OH, MI)
Collecting Date:
Sept 24-25, 2013
Collecting Locality:
North America, United States, Indiana, Newton County

Deep underneath the soil of Indiana lies some of the hardest rock around. Limestone was deposited as sediment at the bottom of an ancient ocean some 400 million years ago. Since then the ocean has disappeared, and the sediments turned into rock, and have been buried under hundreds of feet of more recent sediment. About 100 million years ago a large meteorite struck what is now northwest Indiana, creating an impact crater about 12 kilometers, or 7.25 miles, across - the fourth largest in the United States. The impact was large enough that the central area of the crater rebounded back upward. This created high ground that was not buried as deeply by the sediments that covered the rest of the crater and the Midwest.

Shatter cones are very reliable evidence of a meteorite impact. They are identified by the distinctive-looking, conical shaped features that show striated fractures on their surfaces. They can form in any type of rock, though most well-formed shatter cones form in fine-grained rocks and can measure from millimeters to meters in length. Shatter cones form under relatively high pressure, greater than nuclear bombs, and are usually found below a crater's floor and in the central uplift feature of complex impact craters.

The large impact at Kentland caused two benefits that allow humans to use the limestone there today. First, the impact was large enough that there was a rebound effect, where the central area of the impact came back up several hundred feet. Since the rock is near the surface people can access it easily without needing to remove much soil above. Secondly, the impact fractured the rock making it much easier to remove from the ground. Today, limestone from the Kentland Quarry is used for concrete in bridges and buildings, asphalt, rail ballast, and laying the foundation for roads to local windmill farms.