File:Yarrabubba crater in Western Australia.jpg
Yarrabubba_crater_in_Western_Australia.jpg (540 × 502 pixels, file size: 74 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)
Summary[edit | edit source]
Description |
The Yarrabubba crater in Western Australia is now believed to be the world's oldest impact crater, at some 2.2 billion years old. |
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Source |
The image appears on a website entitled, "Scientists just discovered that an asteroid may have ended 'Snowball Earth' 2.2 billion years ago" at https://www.baxterbulletin.com/story/news/nation/2020/01/21/snowball-earth-oldest-asteroid-impact-site-discovered-australia/4531149002/. |
Date |
21 January 2020 (upload date) |
Author |
Chris Kirkland |
Rationale |
No free licensed or public domain alternatives known to exist to show flooding the Yarrabubba crater in Western Australia now believed to be the world's oldest impact crater, at some 2.2 billion years old. |
Permission |
Fair Use |
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current | 03:54, 22 January 2020 | 540 × 502 (74 KB) | Marshallsumter (discuss | contribs) | {{Information1 |Description = The Yarrabubba crater in Western Australia is now believed to be the world's oldest impact crater, at some 2.2 billion years old. |Source = The image appears on a website entitled, "Scientists just discovered that an asteroid may have ended 'Snowball Earth' 2.2 billion years ago" at https://www.baxterbulletin.com/story/news/nation/2020/01/21/snowball-earth-oldest-asteroid-impact-site-discovered-australia/4531149002/. |Date = 21 January 2020 (upload date) |Author... |
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