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  2. File:Crater-depth-diagram.svg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Crater-depth-diagram.svg

    English: How crater-depth is measured, using the side-view of a typical crater. Depth "A" measures from the surface to the bottom of the crater. Depth "B" measures from the mean height of the rim to the bottom of the crater.

  3. Crater depth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crater_depth

    The depth of an impact crater in a solid planet or moon may be measured from the local surface to the bottom of the crater, or from the rim of the crater to the bottom. Crater depth diagram. The diagram above shows the full (side) view of a typical crater. Depth "A" measures from the surface to the bottom of the crater.

  4. List of impact structures on Earth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_impact_structures...

    The largest in the last one million years is the 14-kilometre (8.7 mi) Zhamanshin crater in Kazakhstan and has been described as being capable of producing a nuclear-like winter. [11] The source of the enormous Australasian strewnfield (c. 780 ka) is a currently undiscovered crater probably located in Southeast Asia. [12] [13]

  5. Complex crater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Complex_crater

    A central-peak crater is the most basic form of complex crater. A central-peak crater can have a tightly spaced, ring-like arrangement of peaks, thus be a peak ring crater, though the peak is often single. [3] Central-peak craters can occur in impact craters via meteorites. An Earthly example is Mistastin crater, in Canada. [1]

  6. Underground nuclear weapons testing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Underground_nuclear...

    Underground nuclear testing is the test detonation of nuclear weapons that is performed underground. When the device being tested is buried at sufficient depth, the nuclear explosion may be contained, with no release of radioactive materials to the atmosphere.

  7. Traces of Catastrophe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traces_of_Catastrophe

    Chapter 3 is about the process of formation of a crater during an impact event. The propagation of the shock wave leads to progressive stages of contact/compression, excavation and modification. It differentiates simple and complex craters, and multi-ring basins. Then it covers the erosion processes that continue after the crater has been made.

  8. Crater counting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crater_counting

    Shield volcano in Tharsis region on Mars with marked borders, circles represent impact craters counted by crater counting method. Crater counting is a method for estimating the age of a planet's surface based upon the assumptions that when a piece of planetary surface is new, then it has no impact craters; impact craters accumulate after that at a rate that is assumed known.

  9. Explosion crater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Explosion_crater

    An explosion crater is a type of crater formed when material is ejected from the surface of the ground by an explosion at or immediately above or below the surface. Stylised cross-section of a crater formed by a below-ground explosion. A crater is formed by an explosion through the displacement and ejection of material from the ground.