The two largest craters form the pear-shaped Abram Lake while the remaining three are located to the north.[4] They have been very well preserved.
The craters are the result of the fall of possible iron meteorites at approximately 5300 BCE (Holocene), which would give them an age of about 7,300 years.[1]
^Gurov, E. P.; Gurova, E. P.; Kovaliukh, N. N. (1987). "Gruppa meteoritnykh kraterov macha v zapadnoy Yakutii" [The group of Macha meteorite craters in western Iakutiia]. Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR. 296 (1): 185–188. Bibcode:1987DoSSR.296..185G.