Serra da Cangalha


Serra da Cangalha is an impact crater in the State of Tocantins, near the border of Maranhão State, in north/northeastern Brazil. The crater is between in diameter, making it the second-largest known crater in Brazil. Its age is estimated to be about 220 million years. The name means Pack-Saddle Mountains in Portuguese.

Description

The outer perimeter is a circular inward scarp about in diameter on the largely undisturbed Cretaceous and upper Silurian sediments of the Parnaíba basin, breached on the west, north, and south sides by drainage valleys. Within the perimeter there is a series of concentric circular valleys and a central basin, all at roughly the same elevation, separated by ring walls. Shuttle Radar Topography Mission imagery shows a faint ring about in diameter, a second ring of gentle hills about in diameter, and an inner ring of steeper hills, about in diameter and up to high, open to the northwest, surrounding a central basin about in diameter.
The impact origin is attested by the presence of impact breccias, quartzite shatter cones and shocked quartz. The meteorite is believed to have struck the surface at a low oblique angle, 25 to 30 degrees on dry land. Radial faults are present inside the crater, and some extend up to 16 km from the center.
Disturbed and steeply inclined sediments from the Carboniferous and Devonian periods occur within the crater. A magnetic survey of the structure indicates that deformation within the crater extends to a depth of about.

History and studies

The identification of the structure as an impact crater was first published in 1973 by R.S. Dietz and B.M. French.
Shatter cones were reported by Beatty in 1980.
Impact breccias, impact melting, and shocked quartz were reported by McHone in his 1986 thesis.
A magnetic survey of the structure was published by A.A. Adepelumi and others in 2005.