Wilkes Land crater: The 315-mile anomaly beneath East Antarctica that’s possibly the ‘greatest impact crater known’ on Earth

by oqtey
Map of Antarctica showing virtual deformation values. The Wilkes Land anomaly is clearly visible in the bottom right corner of the map.

QUICK FACTS

Name: Wilkes Land crater

Location: East Antarctica

Coordinates: 70°S 120°E

Why it’s incredible: Evidence suggests it could be the greatest known impact crater on Earth.

The Wilkes Land crater is a hole in the bedrock beneath East Antarctica‘s ice sheet measuring 315 miles (510 kilometers) across. Researchers have been trying to explain its existence since the 1960s, and the most recent evidence suggests it was born from a cataclysmic meteorite impact.

The crater was first detected as a huge dent in Earth’s gravitational field. Initial ground-based seismic and gravity surveys already indicated that the crater was huge — around 150 miles (240 km) across — but newer techniques reveal that it is likely more than double this size.

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