Remnants of ancient planet found in famous meteorite
By Chris Ciaccia, Fox News, reposted in the New York Post, September 3, 2019
the Wedderburn meteorite, photo by Rodney Start, Museums Victoria |
Though it was discovered in the Australian outback in the 1950s and has been studied often since then, researchers only just recently found a surprising result buried inside the Wedderburn meteorite — remnants of an ancient planet and a new mineral not seen in nature.
The 7-ounce red and black meteorite was found in Victoria, Australia, in 1951, but planetary scientist Geoffrey Bonnin told Australian news outlet The Age that it’s actually from the molten core of a planet from millions of years ago.
“It got blasted apart,” Bonnin said in the interview.
As a result of the explosion, the meteorite, which had an abundance of carbon inside, became heated. The carbon fused with the iron inside and formed a new mineral known as edscottite, named after Edward Scott, a pioneering cosmochemist from the University of Hawaii.
Edscottite has been seen before, but only inside smelters, as iron is being turned into steel. It’s the fact that it has been seen in nature that has allowed researchers to give it its name.
Bonnin added that “all rocks” are, to some degree, “a little bit radioactive.” He pointed out that as the planet exploded, it may have been hit by some other celestial object, causing a mass collision that sent an asteroid flying across the solar system.
From there, it entered the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter and ultimately wound up on Earth.
The research has been published in the scientific journal American Mineralogist.
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