The Great Hudson Arc: A 250-mile-wide mystery

Annotated satellite photo of Hudson Bay arc.
Great Arc of Hudson Bay. (Click for a larger view.)

It’s nice to find out that there are still mysteries left in this world, let alone ones that are visible from space. On the southeast corner of Hudson Bay, the coastline traces a near perfect arc, roughly concentric on another ring of islands in the bay. So, what caused it? The obvious answer, proposed in the 1950s, is that it’s the remnants of a large impact crater. Apparently, however, there is none of the usual geologic evidence for this, and over the past 50 years, there has been debate on its origins. From other sites I’ve read, many geologists seem to have concluded that it is a depression caused by glacial load during the ice age, though a recent conference paper (2006) argues that it may indeed be a crater. The current thinking is summarized nicely on this web page:

There is fairly extensive information on this in Meteorite Craters by Kathleen Mark, University Press, isbn 0-8165-1568-9 (paperback). The feature is known as the Nastapoka Arc, and has been compared to Mare Crisium on the Moon. There is “missing evidence,” which suggests that it isn’t an impact structure, however: “Negative results were . . . reached by R. S. Dietz and J. P. Barringer in 1973 in a search for evidence of impact in the region of the Hudson Bay arc. They found no shatter cones, no suevite or unusual melt rocks, no radial faults or fractures, and no metamorphic effects. They pointed out that these negative results did not disprove an impact origin for the arc, but they felt that such an origin appeared unlikely.” (p. 228)

I know next to nothing about geology, but in the spirit of rank amateur naturalists that came before me, I won’t let that stop me from forming an opinion. In physics, whenever you see something that is symmetric about a point, you have to wonder about what is so special about the center of that circle; could it really be chance that roughly 800 miles of coastline all aim at the same point? If not, what defined that point? One explanation for how large circular formations are created is that they start as small, point-like features that get expanded over eons by erosion. In other words, the original sink-hole that started to erode is what defines the center of the improbable circle. There are also lots of physical phenomena that makes circles, such as deposition and flow of viscous materials from a starting point, assuming isotropic (spatially uniform) physical conditions everywhere. However, the planet is not isotropic. In fact, you can see plenty of arc-like features on coastlines and basins visible from satellite photos, and I can’t find a single one that is even close to as geometrically perfect as the Hudson Bay arc. If you overlay a perfect circle on Hudson Bay, as I’ve done in the picture, you see that it is nearly a perfect circle. How would erosion, or a glacial depression, manage to yield such a perfect geometry over such a large scale? Is it possible for the earth to be that homogeneous over such a large distance, and over the geologic span of time required to create it? To my untrained eye, at least, it screams single localized event.

If so, it would’ve been a major event, on par (at least based on size) with the impact site that is credited with putting a cap on the Cretaceous Period and offing the dinosaurs. On the other hand, this fact only serves to heighten the mystery, as you’d think there would be global sedimentary evidence for it. Whether the arc is the result of one of the biggest catastrophic events in earth’s history, or an example of nature somehow managing to create a near perfect circle the size of New York State by processes acting over unimaginably long spans of time, its mere existence is absolutely fascinating.

35 thoughts on “The Great Hudson Arc: A 250-mile-wide mystery

  1. Richard Vallee

    I am not an expert either. But My point is that the whole planet has been made from asteroids collisions. So, what is the matter for questioning the one that seems maybe the most obvious? In another hand, scientists have constantly to revise their point of vue because it is too rigid. They can only go with what they are told to think, no matter what the obvious is. So we can already say, that they will, sooner or later admit that this is one, or even the biggest, impact crater on earth.
    In my humble opinion…

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    1. William Gillespie

      If a meteor punctured the upper mantle seems to me we cannot assume the results would be like other known impact structures.why is there a mysterious temperature in The “crust” under Hudson’s Bay .Why the depression in the Early Paleozoic? Seems to me it is far too early to rule out the possibility of an impact and it’s effect on the geology of northern Ontario at least IMHO.

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    2. Nate Carlson

      Scientists don’t constantly revise their points of view because they are “too rigid”. The whole point of science is to compare ideas and figure out which one best explains what we see in the world around us. Yes, there are often arguments, and sometimes one or two scientists will get stuck on an idea that ends up being wrong, but they aren’t just going “with what they are told to think.” At least they shouldn’t be. Most scientists go through a decade of training in university to think critically and work out problems for themselves based on evidence and mathematical theories. So I think you’re not giving them the credit they are due because expertise is a real thing. In the same way a doctor knows better how to cure an illness or a mechanic knows better how to fix a car, a geologist is gonna know better how this formed. For my part, I see a round thing and think, “well clearly that’s come from some physical symmetry”. A point impact like an asteroid with a lot of momentum hitting at the centre of the arc seems like a pretty plausible reason for its shape, but I don’t have any formal geology training, so I can only think of astrophysical symmetries, not geophysical ones, which means that my inexpert opinion isn’t worth much compared to a geophysicists.

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      1. Karl Tusing

        Nate,
        I’ve seen, on multiple occasions, where scientists have walked out of a scientific presentation, merely because the speaker did not have the credentials they esteemed. Wouldn’t even listen to the scientific data and argument.
        Certainly, “some” scientists go through a decade of training in university “and” think critically and work out problems for themselves based on evidence and mathematical theories. But some don’t have open minds nor ears to listen to scientific data other than theirs.

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    3. Patrick Tays

      The entirety (all the coast) of Hudson’s Bay is loaded with nickle. Many meteors are loaded with nickle. So, did a super meteor hit near the center of the bay?

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  2. David Carlson

    Ice compression in icy-body impacts may clamp the impact shock-wave pressure below the melting point of silicates and below the pressure necessary to form shatter cones, disguising icy-body impact structures.

    And Belcher Islands, near the geometrical center, may be the aqueously-differentiated trans-Neptunian object (TNO) core of the icy body from a much earlier Proterozoic perturbation of the former binary TNO pair which spiraled in to merge and melt a salt-water ocean in the merged ‘contact binary’. Mineral grains precipitate in the core salt-water ocean formed by spiral-in merger, forming a sedimentary core which may undergo diagenesis, lithification and metamorphism from the pressure developed by freezing the salt-water ocean.

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  3. Carl Schuster

    I would like to add that the Arc does not appear on any map I have been able to examine, until after 1783. The Bay had been extensively previously mapped, but the previously surveyed maps all show features that once existed, but no longer do. Houston, we have a problem. Carl G. Schuster

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  4. Martin Trenz

    Looking at the picture above I noticed two odd, smaller circles to the east of the arc. Checking it out on Google Maps i found the bigger one to be “Lac Wiyáshákimi” (the smaller one doesn’t seem to have a name).

    The islands in the middle of the arc are off center. If it was a meteor (or similar) it would – probably – have come in at an angle. That would be consistent with the position of the islands.

    This meteor would then have flung debris from the impact site eastward. A big, heavy piece could have created “Lac Wiyáshákimi”, it is in pretty good alignment for an object from space impacting from the west. Also there is a ring of islands inside that lake as well, which I find very intriguing and consistent with an impact.

    Alternative theory: the lake was crated by smaller debris from the meteor (or whatever it was) that separated from the main body during the fiery traverse through our atmosphere.

    Maybe someone could take rock samples from that lake in order to possibly add another data point to this mystery.

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    1. Joe McAnally

      Doing scientific work in this area is difficult and expensive as the area is way more isolated than it seems. I do like your debris concept. Imagine though if this debris was ice.

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  5. Joe McAnally

    consider this… what if the meteorite impacted the area “through” a mile of ice??? The normal geofeatures would be inapplicable and we need to imagine what this “ice burn” would look like. A lot of huge pieces of ice splashed around the globe for one thing.

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  6. Zemog

    Icy meteor, or comet, impacting on glacier would leave steam and vapor, shock wave would press lower ice into ring and throw up huge steam plume but possibility remains that remnant frozen chunks are at depth…intact as deposited surviving steam and impacting into liquefied rock at low relative T high P.

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  7. Zemog

    Arc carved by steam, ice and shockwave, not direct contact, hence regularity in appearance, it was essentially machined.

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  8. Greg O'Neal

    Possibly the Younger Dryas Impact melting the last vestiges of the Ice Age 11500 years ago? North American ice sheet and comet and Gobekli Tepe… fits nicely.

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  9. Richard Best

    I believe that there is confusion about the age of the Laurentide ice field because scientist (know) how fast glaciers move. I see theories of how a meteor hit the Laurentide Ice sheet as well as other possible comet impact sites throughout the Laurentide field and they age them over millions of years old. No one as far as I have found has theorized that the ice fields of Canada, Baffin Bay and Greenland, and a Hudson Bay meteor crater (possibly several) are the results of a single event: an event of not a meteor rock or metallic origin, but of ice. The finding of Frozen animals could not have happened if they were caught in a blizzard. These animals were frozen at near absolute zero. The only way that could have happened would be if earths atmosphere was pushed away from the surface by a large meteor. I have read that ice would melt entering our atmosphere, but for a similar experiment, someone can take a wet hand and quickly dunk their wet hand into a crucible of molten lead without being burned. It is the steam produced that keeps the hand from burning. The same would hold true of ice entering our atmosphere. The steam generated would create a heat shield allowing the meteor to penetrate the atmosphere and protect it from being destroyed. I believe that the Crater (s) of Hudson bay and all across Canada are the evidence of what caused the Laurentide ice fields. A single event. All Glacial movement radiates from Hudson Bay which supports my theory. The glacial movement was instantaneous as part of the impact.

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  10. Tony Levand

    Hi,
    I was looking at this on Google maps and wondered if it was an impact creator. It seems like it would be have to be billions of years old. There is a ridge along the shore line, eroded by glaciers. The western half is missing, maybe covered by later epochs of rock. The moon has a lot of craters, probably not a square meter that hasn’t been impacted, the earth should have experienced the the same intensity.

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  11. Pete Csanky

    I have visited the Belcher Islands in Hudson Bay by plane from Radisson, Quebec. The Nastapoka Islands directly offshore in Hudson Bay are striking when flying low over them. They exhibit classic “cuesta” features – sandy/gravel/rocky beaches on the offshore Bay side, sloping uphill eastwards, and then dropping abruptly down several hundred feet to below sea level on the easternmost sides facing the mainland. Exactly what you would expect from an impact strike. An aerial survey is here:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=99StWaI4YSE

    Reply
  12. LAWRENCE JANUSZ

    “Eugene Shoemaker showed that shocked quartz is also found inside craters created by meteor impact, such as the Barringer Crater and Chicxulub crater. The presence of shocked quartz supports that such craters were formed by impact, because a volcanic eruption would not generate the required pressure.” From this, can it be determined that the Hudson Arc is or is not an impact event?

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  13. Fionn

    I have enjoyed reading some of your discussion, I also have no scientific training etc but am an amateur archaeologist, I have stumbled upon a mystery which I have been breaking down with my own visual methods. There are a number of astroblemes which appear to be the remains of very large circular sun temples which have been hit with asteroids, destroying them in part but because of their scale and very specific design there is nearly always some evidence of the design left even after the impact. Ref; Aztec sun calendar. The Hudson Bay circle is just one such remain. Only the outer rim design can be still seen by superimposing the photograph of the sun calendar and scaling it properly and then lowering the transparency of the top layer so as to see what remains in the landscape. So I humbly put forward the proposition that there was a civilisation prior to our own which developed a system of these sun temples which were annihilated deliberately by something…capable of impacting earth on a colossal scale. We know of many asteroid impacts some of them at least are I believe the remains of interplanetary conflict. So man made and also cometary /weapon impact .

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  14. Mario Brazeau

    I have a theory: what if there was an impacts before the ice age, glacier have been know to move a lot of material far from where they originated, like material in the moraine north of Toronto. would not the weight and the movement to those glacier erased a lot of impacts evidence. Maybe most of the evidence is deep under water just like the Yucatan crater. Core sample might reveal the answer we need.

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  15. David W. Brown

    I think one of the reasons for geologists to think this is not an impact crater remnant is … psychology. Geologists have been trained to think of geologic feature as formed over geologic time — millions of years — and they have a hard time imagining a catastrophic asteroid strike making major geologic changes in seconds. Heck, before rocks were brought back from the moon since 1969, geologists wrongly imagined most moon craters were volcanic. Geologists didn’t even start thinking about impact craters until the Alvarez paper around 1980, on the cretacious-tertiary boundary having arisen from an asteroid impact. The near-perfect arc on the east side of Hudson Bay? Coincidence? I think not. Geologists once poo-poohed the obvious similar shapes of the western African and eastern South American coasts, too.

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  16. Chuck

    “Ice circles” regularly form on many large rivers each winter in Michigan, Maine, and elsewhere in he northern hemisphere. As they rotate, many of these ice circles grind the adjacent river shoreline into an arc.

    When the Laurentide Ice Sheet began to melt and break up at the end of the last ice age, water flows magnitudes greater than any on earth today were causing catastrophic floods and unprecedented water flows. As the Laurentide Ice Sheet broke up, with much of it two miles thick is not inconceivable that a massive ice circle may have formed and rotated as glacial meltwater flowed away. Such an object at that scale and with that water flow could easily grind several hundred miles of shoreline into a perfect arc.

    If the Great Hudson Arc were caused by the rotation of a large disk of rotating glacial ice, Coriolis effect would deposit drift from the glacier in layers that were angled upwards and counterclockwise from right to left, and they would be deposited in a corresponding arc that would share a common epicenter with the Great Hudson Arc.

    The meteor theory is compelling because it the simplest explanation, but on the other hand William of Ockham was a Catholic theologian.

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  17. Kevin S McDonald

    A meteor impact at the end of the last ice age would answer a few questions. The Usselo horizon and all the great flood myths.

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  18. Rick Groll

    Erosion by glacial scouring would have long-removed surficial evidence of impact cratering, only the compressive-phase compaction caused in the line of trajectory would have left the center of the inpact zone work-hardened, which is why the center of these features remain higher than the surrounding annular scour pit which betrays their location. On the other hand, within these center landforms, the original metamorphic texture of the rock is preserved, work hardening would have created annular rings in the work hardened rock – but to quote Artie Johnston from Laugh-In – interesting, but useless.

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  19. Merick Groom

    Boots on the ground in North Western Ontario. I saw large amounts of volcanic rock in kingfisher Indian reserve just last year. Just walking down the beach. This is probably roughly 300 miles from the crater. I had a theory in my brain and searched this topic on the internet. Don’t know the answers but it is very intriguing

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  20. Richard Probert

    A large comet exploding Tunguska-like in the atmosphere above a two mile thick ice sheet perhaps? Causing a layer of soot in the geologic strata as the intense heat burned off vegetation as far south as Venezuela. Below the soot layer Clovis man and the mega fauna of the ice age. Above that layer, no mega fauna and no Clovis man. Melting the ice sheet, pouring cold water into the oceans, stopping the Gulf Stream, hence a return of the ice age for a few thousand years. The Younger Dryas period.

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  21. Rhonda Claes

    I used to work in Sanikiluaq. To get there, I had to fly from Great Whale, very near the coast. I would literally gasp every time I would see this almost perfect arc from the plane and I often thought it was a meteor impact as it is perfectly arced. So I thought to myself, if Great Whale is the edge, then Sanikiluaq must be where the impact was/is, more or less. The thing is, I have a number of perfect black rocks, which are numerous around the beaches there. They look like they were spun into circles and they have a lot of holes in them. They are also slightly magnetic. I found Sanikiluaq to be very very beautiful, where belugas would swim almost to your doorstep, the water sparkled like a billion diamonds, the foxes would eat out of your hand and the geese flew in the thousands. But it was isolated, almost desolate in winter, and time and progress were frozen as well. Wonderful people too, for the most part. I highly recommend the flight. You’ll never forget it.

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  22. Clayton Morrell

    There’s a fascinating discussion on the subreddit r/alternatehistory about this.

    Basically, almost all major ancient megaliths (Angkor Wat, Giza pyramids, Cusco, Machu Picchu, Easter Island and numerous others all fall on the same line around the globe, but it’s 30 degrees offset from our current equator. Some are even dedicated to the sun or sun god.
    At the same time, the last ice age featured miles of ice over Canada, but Siberia had grass and Mammoths. How do you account for this if they were both at the same latitude? But if the equator was along the above mentioned line, Canada would be almost entirely in the arctic circle and Siberia would be spared. Further, if Canada were struck a glancing blow by a meteor at exactly Hudson’s Bay in a southerly direction, it would be the exactly direction needed to push our equator to where it is now (go get a globe and see for yourself, it’s nuts). The fragments and debris would have been ejected southward, possibly carving out one of the great lakes (Michigan) and its subsequent debris scatter pattern would have created the Carolina bays features that all align to that area and at the same point in history, formed by flying ice chunks and subsequently filled in.
    How big would the impact have to be? Analysis of the charcoal quantities leads to the conclusion that up to 1/10th of the world’s biomass would have to be incinerated. The heat caused the ice to melt, causing the flood pulses that raised the ocean 400 feet. I would argue the entire mid atlantic ridge was suddenly crushed downward by the sudden influx of trillions of tons of water, especially along the Azores, and possibly flooding the gulf of Mexico (look at southern Florida then drop the ocean levels 400 feet). And the sudden drop in Atlantic sea levels caused by the gulf of mexico inundation and mid-ridge collapse would have caused a pressure differential between the Atlantic and Pacific/Indian ocean waters. The Pacific broke through to fill the void with great violence causing the crescent between SA and Antarctica, and the Indian ocean waters did the same to South Africa, shearing off the continental shelf river features from extreme lateral flow on the SE side but leaving the SW side intact. The inrush of water, coupled with the intense rains following a glacier ejecting ice into the atmosphere with all the ash, would easily explain every flood legend out there, especially the Greek legend of Phaeton who used Apollo’s chariot and crashed into the earth, and his sisters wept tears of ‘Amber” so much that the oceans rose and flooded the land. Rain full of charcoal and other debris could very much look like that.

    Anyways, I’m glad this site is here.
    I really hope and wish people greater than myself could stitch this entire narrative together

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  23. Andrew Robertson

    Wow, I’m so thrilled to have found this discussion. IMHO; I’ve bought into the The Younger Dryas Impact Theory, so the question is always, where’s the crater? Could it have been staring us in the face all this time? Could the Hudson Bay Arc be the smoking gun? Could this be an impact from just 12,600 years ago? Not millions of years ago? Could it be that the cause of the flood myths, the mass extinction of the mega fauna and reboot of humankind is found in the middle of Canada? Canada!? I say yes! That is impossible the scientist may say. And it’s way too big. But is it? It’s hard to get your head around 2 miles thick of ice. Like a catcher’s mitt, the glacier absorbed the shock and along the way, saved the earth from a total extinction event. This also ties in nicely with the Carolina Bays theories. Now, you must wonder, if that is the case, then what are the odds that in all of earth’s existence that a glacier is formed precisely when an object at least twice, probably more, than the size of the dinosaur killing bolide happens to impact on a soft ice sheet landing pad, but leaving us no hard evidence, yet saving the entire planet from a complete scorched earth fireball? Is it possible that the glacier saved our world? Big questions deserve big answers. It is my hope that the necessary research is done to answers these questions once and for all. Call it the Hudson Bay Research Project – the Truth is Out There. Who’s in? Grab your shovels!

    BTW: This looks cool
    https://cosmicsummit2023.com/practical-information/

    Reply

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