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User:Ikluft/essay/Categorization of craters

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Crater Lake is a volcanic caldera in Oregon, US
Barringer Crater, also known as Meteor Crater, is an impact crater in Arizona, US
Sedan Crater is from a 1962 nuclear test explosion in Nevada, US
Tycho Crater is one of the most prominent impact craters on the visible side of the Moon
Summit crater at the top of Mt Fuji in Japan
Soda Lakes are a pair of volcanic maars in Nevada, US

Categorization of craters has been a source of recurring confusion over the years on Wikipedia. This essay presents lessons learned and best practices for creating and using categories about various kinds of craters. It also includes advice on what not to categorize as a crater.

The dictionary definitions of a crater require, for geological uses, that it must have been caused by some kind of explosion or eruption.[1][2]

The source of the confusion comes from the use of the word "crater" for several unrelated geological processes involving asteroid impacts, volcanic eruptions, or nuclear and chemical explosions. Over the years, many editors have looked at a topic and referred to it just as a "crater", leading to jumbled, disorganized categories containing articles and files with a mix of all kinds.

There are also some geological formations and map illusions which commonly are mistaken for craters. So this page will also point out items which should not be categorized as any kind of crater, and where to put them instead.

Background

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In 2009, there were categories with names like "Craters", "Craters by country", "Craters of Canada", etc. Those categories had instruction that they were just for impact craters. But articles for other kinds of craters were continually being added to them by well-meaning editors who either didn't read or didn't understand the directions. Discussion led to a mass-renaming of 76 categories so those all had "impact craters" in their names, instead of just "craters". That worked well at resolving the confusion.

Lessons learned

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Cleaning up the categories and answering questions has led to some advice: 1) don't just use "crater" without a type in a category name, and 2) re-created categories were marked as disambiguation or redirect to help editors find the right category.

Category name must include crater type

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The big lesson learned from the 2009 mass renaming was categories about craters must include the type of crater in the name. They can be impact, volcanic or explosion craters, but not just craters.[1][2] Otherwise it turns out to be too easy to find for editors to use tools like HotCat that only show the name of the category and none of the instructions on the category text. (See Types of craters below.)

Crater lakes have the same issues as craters, and should also be placed in qualified categories.

Craters category kept for disambiguation

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Another lesson was learned 10 years after the renaming in 2019, after some of the original category names were re-created. Category:Craters started to fill up with a confusing mix of miscellaneous subcategories and articles again. After cleaning it out, instead of proposing to delete it, it was kept as a disambiguation category. It has specific instructions to use the specific category tree for the type of crater: Category:Impact craters, Category:Volcanic craters or Category:Explosion craters.

Also, Category:Craters on Earth was emptied and turned into a templated redirect to Category:Impact craters on Earth. If it had been deleted, it would eventually have been re-created too. So the redirect tells future editors the right place to go.

In November 2019, two CfR discussions sorted out crater lakes into Category:Volcanic crater lakes (see Crater_lakes CfR) and Category:Impact crater lakes (see Annular lakes CfR), leaving Category:Crater lakes as a disambiguation similar to Category:Craters.

Types of craters

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So instead of just using the word "crater", now we know to specify which of several types of geological formations we mean:

Other formations, even if resembling craters, are considered depressions, not craters.

Impact craters

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Impact craters are scientifically relatively new. Understanding of the geological structure and methods to prove or disprove an impact only began to be learned in the 1960s. This subfield of geology was originally established by Eugene Shoemaker when he found that Arizona's Meteor Crater had the same overturned structures and shocked minerals as Nevada's nuclear test craters, only much bigger. A detailed overview of the science of impact cratering is publicly available in the Lunar and Planetary Institute's e-book "Traces of Catastrophe", which is available for free download.[3]

Impact crater lakes

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Lakes in impact craters should be categorized under Category:Impact crater lakes.

Confirmed by citing Earth Impact Database

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There is another common confusion when the news media reports a newly-discovered impact crater. Invariably, someone makes a good faith edit citing the news article and claiming the new crater is confirmed. But there is always more peer review to do at that point. So Wikipedia editors don't decide what is a confirmed impact - interpreting the evidence is just too easy to fall into a trap of original research.

The Earth Impact Database maintained by University of New Brunswick decides when an impact is confirmed.[4] Confirmed impact sites have an EID entry. The parts of the URL can then be used in Wikipedia's {{Cite Earth Impact DB}} template to cite it as a reference. That automatically adds the article to Category:Earth Impact Database.

Possible impact craters

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All other impact craters and structures, whether theorized or published in scientific journals and not (yet) listed in EID, go under Category:Possible impact craters on Earth.

However, there are lots of geological processes which can make circular or apparently circular features. Seeing a round feature on a map is not good enough to call something a crater, or even necessarily theorize about an asteroid impact. The rocks at the site have to be studied to seriously consider a new impact theory.[3]

Impact craters on other astronomical bodies

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Earth has many geological forces such as erosion and plate tectonics which cover and erase craters, renewing the surface. Contrast with the Moon where the surface geology is primarily driven by impacts. Depending on an astronomical body's amount of geological activity, there is little to no doubt whether a circular structure is an impact. So if astronomers and planetary scientists report via a reliable source a crater on another astronomical body, that's an acceptable source. Use the appropriate subcategory of Category:Impact craters on planets, Category:Impact craters on moons or Category:Impact craters on asteroids.

Volcanic craters

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Volcanic craters should be categorized under Category:Volcanic craters or its subcategories. If reliable sources for geology call a structure a volcanic crater, caldera or maar, that's acceptable to call it and categorize it as a volcanic crater.

Types of volcanic craters

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Some different eruption processes cause different types of volcanic craters, large and small.

  • A caldera is the largest volcanic crater, formed by a collapse of the volcano during an eruption.[5]
  • A maar is medium-sized compared to other volcanic craters, and is formed by an explosive eruption when magma comes in contact with groundwater. After the eruption ends, the maar may fill with water to form a lake.[6]
  • Various volcanic cones may have a small crater where debris is deposited around an eruption vent at the summit or flank.
    • This doesn't currently have its own category. Use the appropriate subcategory of Category:Volcanoes.

Volcanic crater lakes

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Lakes in volcanic craters should be categorized under Category:Volcanic crater lakes.

Explosion craters

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Nuclear and chemical explosion craters should go in Category:Explosion craters or the appropriate subcategory.

There is no category for explosion crater lakes. For example, Lake Chagan is the only nuclear explosion crater lake. That isn't enough for a category according to WP:SMALL. (And let's hope there never are enough of those to make a category.) If there are lakes in other explosion craters, use Category:Artificial lakes.

Non-craters

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There have been some cases of confusion by editors who wanted to call a sinkhole a type of crater. They aren't craters because they aren't the result of an explosion.[1][2] They should go under Category:Sinkholes. Cave collapses are considered sinkholes, by definition.

Any other kind of depression which is not a crater should be categorized under Category:Depressions (geology).

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The following Categories for Discussion items establish background and consensus around categorization of craters.

proposal discussion closed result
merge Category:Astroblemes to Category:Craters on Earth 26 August 2009  Pass
reorg Category:Craters (76 categories) 30 August 2009  Pass
rename Category:Possible impact craters to Category:Possible impact craters on Earth 12 September 2009  Pass
rename Category:Impact craters by geologic time scale to Category:Impact craters on Earth by geologic time scale 27 September 2009  Pass
delete Category:Rubielos de la Cérida impact structure 25 April 2011  Pass
reorg Category:Categories by time period - including rename Category:Impact craters on Earth by geologic time scale to Category:Impact craters on Earth by geological period 17 May 2012  Pass
rename Category:Modern impact events to Category:Modern Earth impact events 19 December 2013  Pass
delete Category:Earth Impact Database 16 January 2014  Fail
delete Category:Unknown origin craters 10 November 2019  Pass
delete Category:Subsidence craters 10 November 2019  Pass
rename Category:Crater lakes to Category:Volcanic crater lakes 28 November 2019  Pass
rename Category:Annular lakes to Category:Impact crater lakes 28 November 2019  Pass

References

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  1. ^ a b c "crater". Dictionary.com Unabridged (Online). n.d. Retrieved 2019-11-06.
  2. ^ a b c "crater". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary. Merriam-Webster.
  3. ^ a b French, Bevan M (1998). Traces of Catastrophe: A Handbook of Shock-Metamorphic Effects in Terrestrial Meteorite Impact Structures. Lunar and Planetary Institute. OCLC 40770730.
  4. ^ "Earth Impact Database". University of New Brunswick. Retrieved 2019-10-07.
  5. ^ "Glossary - Caldera". United States Geological Survey, Volcano Hazards Program. Retrieved 2019-10-07.
  6. ^ "Glossary - Maar". United States Geological Survey, Volcano Hazards Program. Retrieved 2019-10-07.