Ever drive around Wyoming, looking at the landscape, wondering why it looks the way it does?

There are many reasons for it.

Wyoming's topography, like the entire planet, is forever changing. Even today.

This land has been a tropical swamp with crocodiles.

It has been as sandy as the deserts of North Africa.

It has been under a mile of ice.

Mountains have risen and fallen.

Rivers and lakes have come and gone.

One massive volcano we now call Yellowstone has changed Wyoming and the rest of North America drastically.

Then, there was that time a massive meteor hit almost dead center of what we now call this state.

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There is a massive bowl in Wyoming.

Around it are what are now recognized as craters.

There are two videos below explaining the evidence. 

Take a good look at some of Wyoming's landscape and it's hard to imagine that the state does not have a big meteor impact crater somewhere.

There is actually one near the center of Wyoming. Cloud Creek Crater is in Natrona County, about 48 miles northwest of Casper.

As you might imagine it is circular. Its diameter of about 7 km, and it is buried beneath about 1200 m of Mesozoic rock. Its estimated age is about 20 million years which puts it in the Jurassic Period.

Don't bother driving out to have a look. The impact feature is not exposed. But it is known by those drilling for oil and gas.

The Cloud Creek Crater was first reported in a publication back in was in 1985. It may have been discovered back in 1973 by the Casper geologist Jack Wroble.

If the impact occurred during the late Triassic-Middle Jurassic, no telling how much life it snuffed out at that time.

Did a massive meteor strike Wyoming 280 million years ago? Geologist think they have have the evidence to come to that conclusion. They don't have direct evidence of the impact site itself but they have discovered dozens of secondary craters that all point back to a single parental crater location. Reading about this these small secondary craters I was reminded of a family vacation in which we spent time in the Bighorn Basin of Wyoming hiking and looking for fossils. In addition to talking about this meteor crater I take you on a short hike up Sheep Mountain and I talk about how these craters found in just one specific layer of the geological column are a big problem for the young-earth believe that all these rocks were laid down in just days or weeks. Geological Society of America article on Wyoming meteorite: https://pubs.geoscienceworld.org/gsa/...

Hot Air Balloon Threads Wind River Canyon Wyoming

A Gallery Of High Planes Wyoming Winter Bison

Special thanks to Grandpa Rich of Thermopolis Wyoming for these photos.

Each morning Grandpa drives up to check on the herd in Hot Springs County Wyoming.

As he drives around he takes photos and sends them to me.

An audience of 1 is not enough.

That's why I'm sharing them with you.

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