This is really neat science and the next step will provide us with a
distribution bell curve that should pick up a profile for what has
been thrown at us. All good stuff.
The bulk of the debris in the inner solar system comes from this
event and I would expect that there is a long decline curve
associated with it that should show up.
The day is soon coming when we can explore the asteroid belt to
discover what it is made of. Confirming the impact conjecture is
good news.
Ancient Asteroid
Destroyer Finally Found, And It's a New Kind of Meteorite
By Becky Oskin, Senior
Writer
June 27, 2014
For 50 years,
scientists have wondered what annihilated the ancestor of
L-chondrites, the roof-smashing, head-bonking meteorites that
frequently pummel Earth.
Now, a new kind of
meteorite discovered in a southern Sweden limestone quarry may
finally solve the mystery, scientists report. The strange new rock
may be the missing "other half" from one of the biggest
interstellar collisions in a billion years.
"Something we
didn't really know about before was flying around and crashed into
the L-chondrites," said study co-author Gary Huss of the
University of Hawaii at Manoa.
The space rock is a
470-million-year-old fossil meteorite first spotted three years ago
by workers at Sweden's Thorsberg quarry, where stonecutters have an
expert eye for extraterrestrial objects. Quarriers have plucked 101
fossil meteorites from the pit's ancient pink limestone in the last
two decades.
Researchers have
nicknamed the new meteorite the "mysterious object" until
its formal name is approved, said lead study author Birger Schmitz,
of Lund University in Sweden and Chicago's Field Museum. It will
likely be named for a nearby church, the Österplana, he said.
Mysterious find
Geochemically, the
meteorite falls into a class called the primitive achondrites,
and most resembles a rare group of achondrites called the winonaites.
But small differences in certain elements in its chromite grains set
the mysterious object apart from the winonaites, and its texture and
exposure age distinguish the new meteorite from the other 49,000 or
so meteorites found so far on Earth.
"It's a very,
very strange and unusual find," Schmitz told Live Science's Our
Amazing Planet.
The new meteorite was recently reported online
in the journal Earth and Planetary Science Letters, and the
study will appear in the journal's Aug. 15 print edition.
Until now, all of the
quarry's fossil meteorites were L-chondrites. Schmitz, who has led
the chondrite cataloging, admitted the rock hunt had become "quite
boring."
But the rare find has
not only revitalized interest in the quarry, it has also brought
together the world's top meteorite experts for a global hunt through
geologic time. Thanks to Schmitz's careful detective work on
meteorites, scientists now know that each kind of meteorite
leaves behind a unique calling card: tough minerals called spinels.
Even if meteorites weather away, their spinels linger for hundreds of
million of years in Earth rocks. Schmitz and his cohorts
think they can pin down how many meteorites rained down on Earth in
the past 2.5 billion years, as well as what kind fell, by extracting
extraterrestrial spinels from sedimentary rocks. Their work may
confirm suspicions that recent meteorite falls represent a mere
fraction of the rocks drifting in space.
"I think our new
finding adds to the understanding that the meteorites that come down
on Earth today may not be entirely representative of what is out
there," Schmitz said. "One thing our study shows is that we
maybe don't know as much as we think we know about the solar system."
Ancient wreckage
The limestone quarry
preserves the remnants of a cosmic cataclysm that took place 470
million years ago, during the Ordovician Period. Scientists think
there was an enormous crash between two large bodies out in the
asteroid belt. The crash blew apart two asteroids, or an
asteroid and comet, slinging dust and debris toward Earth. One of the
impactors was the source of all L-chondrite meteorites.
But no one has ever found a piece of the rock that hit the
L-chondrite parent, until now.
The Swedish
meteorite's exposure age — the length of time it sailed through
space — is the key to placing the fossil space rock at the scene of
the crash. The meteorite zipped from the asteroid belt to Earth in
just 1 million years. That's the same remarkably young exposure age
as the L-chondrites recovered from the Thorsberg quarry, suggesting
the rocks sprayed Earth in the same wave of space debris.
[Infographic: Asteroid Belt Explained]
Meteorite expert Tim
Swindle, who was not involved in the study, praised the team's
careful analysis and said it was unlikely that any other meteorite
but an Ordovician fragment would have such a short exposure age.
"Very, very few modern meteorites have exposure ages that low,"
said Swindle, a professor at the University of Arizona in Tucson.
"Typically, it takes things longer to get here from the asteroid
belt," he said. "It's a telling argument."
But because so little
is left of the original meteorite — almost all its minerals have
been altered to clay — Swindle thinks there's wiggle room for
linking it to known classes of meteorite, instead of calling it a new
find.
"I think it's
entirely plausible [that it's a new kind of meteorite], and it's a
great study, but that's not a guarantee they've got it right,"
Swindle said. "But if they didn't, it's because of new things
we'll find out in future work, not because of their analysis."
The geochemical tests
were performed on sand-sized chromite spinels, which confirmed the
rock's extraterrestrial origin. The altered clay is also about
100,000 times richer in iridium than terrestrial rocks. Iridium is
the element that marks the meteorite impact horizon when the
dinosaurs went extinct.
Hunt for space
history
Schmitz now plans to
search for these strange achondrite spinels in the quarry sediments,
as well as in other rocks of the same age around the world.
Ordovician meteorite spinels from L-chondrites have been found in
China, Russia and Sweden, and small micrometeorites have been
discovered in Scotland and South America. Researchers think about 100
times as many meteorites fell on Earth during the Ordovician compared
with today, but only about a dozen impact craters of the proper age
have been identified. [Crash! 10 Biggest Impact Craters on Earth]
A bigger quest is
also in the works. Schmitz and his colleagues plan to dissolve tons
of rock in acid in a global search for meteoritic spinel grains. This
detective work will help researchers pin down the history of the
asteroid belt and solar system. Spinels can provide an estimate of
how many meteorites fell in the past, and what kind hit Earth. These
tiny pieces of vanished meteorites may fill in missing history,
because meteorite impact craters often vanish due to geologic forces.
"This can give
you a ground truth for models for how the solar system may have
evolved over time," said Gary Huss, a co-author on the Swedish
meteorite study who will collaborate on the spinel search. "I
think a lot of people have worried for some time that we don't really
know what's going on in the asteroid belt.
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