The Australasian strewnfield is the youngest and largest of the tektitestrewnfields, with recent estimates suggesting it might cover 10%–30% of the Earth's surface.[1][2][3] Research indicates that the impact forming the tektites occurred around 788,000 years ago, most likely in Southeast Asia.[4][5] The probable location of the crater is unknown and has been the subject of multiple competing hypotheses.
^Glass, B.P. and Wu, J., 1993. Coesite and shocked quartz discovered in the, Australasian and North American, microtektite layers.Geology, 21(5), pp.435-438.
^Prasad, M.S., Gupta, S.M. and Kodagali, V.N., 2003. Two layers of Australasian impact ejecta in the Indian Ocean?.Meteoritics & Planetary Science, 38(9), pp.1373-1381.
^Prasad, M.S., Mahale, V.P. and Kodagali, V.N., 2007. New sites of Australasian microtektites in the central Indian Ocean: Implications for the location and size of source crater.Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets, 112, no. E06007, 11 pp.
^Jourdan, F., Nomade, S., Wingate, M.T., Eroglu, E. and Deino, A., 2019. Ultraprecise age and formation temperature of the Australasian tektites constrained by 40Ar/39Ar analyses.Meteoritics & Planetary Science, 54(10), pp.2573-2591.
^Westgate, J.A., Pillans, B.J., Alloway, B.V., Pearce, N.J. and Simmonds, P., 2021. New fission-track ages of Australasian tektites define two age groups: discriminating between formation and reset ages.Quaternary Geochronology, 66, no. 101113, 18 pp.