Hi

The biggest Muong Nong-type tektites appear to be in the Laos-NE Thailand 
border and in Hainan. For sure they are very proximal tektites/impactites. I 
think the microtektite distribution pattern is a better indicator though as 
it's going to be statistically more reliable. All the evidence points to the 
Gulf of Tonkin, between Vietnam and Hainan - probably closer to Vietnam. This 
is a shallow sea (but might not have been sea at the time of impact, not that 
it would make a lot of difference). A crater in the sea would explain why a 
43km +/- crater has not yet been found. In reality I bet this crater has been 
found on oil field seismic which should criss-cross the whole of this area. 
Maybe it hasn't been recognised, maybe the 'structure' has been kept secret 
because of it's possible economic value or maybe it lies in disputed 
Vietnamese-Chinese waters. I'm pretty sure it's out there though! I do wonder 
if any trace of rims would show up on bathymetric maps,
 but there has been a very large sediment input into this area in the last 
800,000 years and I would imagine it could easily bury the crater.

Interestingly the largest splashforms are found 2000 km away in the 
Philippines, not proximally in Indochina as one might first expect. Maybe this 
is because the Philippinite melt sheet was disrupted higher in the atmosphere 
meaning that philippinites were not immediately acted upon by significant 
atmospheric forces. The Indochinites probably formed at lower atmospheric 
levels that might aid breaking up of the largest of bodies. I'm sure there are 
a number of factors at play though. Same applies to the Chesapeake impact - the 
largest splashform tektites are 2000 km away in Texas.

Aubrey



--- On Sun, 13/12/09, Paul H. <oxytropidoce...@cox.net> wrote:

> From: Paul H. <oxytropidoce...@cox.net>
> Subject: [meteorite-list] worlds biggest tektite in history
> To: "meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com" 
> <meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com>
> Date: Sunday, 13 December, 2009, 17:38
> Phil Morgan wrote:
> 
> "For any interested in this topic, Aubrey Whymark has a
> nice page on
> large tektites here http://www.tektites.co.uk/largest_tektites.html ."
> 
> HasĀ  anyone tried plotting the locations of the
> largest known tektites?
> 
> It seems like, their distribution, especially of the Muong
> Nong-type 
> tektites, would provide some clues about the type and
> location of
> the impact that created them.
> 
> Best Regrads,
> 
> Paul H.
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