The findings may shed light on how such impacts can reshape the face of planets and generate new habitats for life, researchers said.
Major craters sometimes possess rings of rocky hills in their centres known as peak rings.
Most of these peak rings exist on extraterrestrial rocky bodies such as the Moon or Venus, making it difficult to analyse these structures in detail and pin down their origins.
The crater resulted from the epic crash of an object about 10 kilometre wide, and the resulting impact is thought to have ended the age of dinosaurs about 65 million years ago.
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They discovered granite that likely once was deeply buried for about 500 million years, said Sean Gulick, a marine geophysicist at UT Austin.
After the impact, "the earth there would have temporarily behaved like a slow-moving fluid," Gulick said.
"The stony asteroid would have opened up a hole probably almost the thickness of Earth's crust, almost 30 km deep, and on the order of 80 to 100 km wide," he added.
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