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WHERE DO METEORITES COME FROM? A NEW STUDY CHALLENGES POPULAR THEORY
Inverse ^ | 6/8/2021 | Passant Rabie

Posted on 06/08/2021 6:14:49 PM PDT by LibWhacker

GEOLOGIST BIRGER SCHMITZ doesn’t just look for ordinary rocks. The Lund University professor trots the globe in search of millions or billions of year-old dust from space.

His travels have recently taken him to California, Sweden, China, and Russia, collecting 10,000 kilograms of cosmic sedimentary rock from 15 different windows of time over the past 500 million years of Earth-fallen meteorites.

Schmitz tells Inverse that the purpose of this extensive search was to trace the origins of meteorites. Instead of finding answers, though, Schmitz and his colleagues only came up with more questions. And it’s causing a re-think to the origin stories of space rocks and the history of Earth.

“That's a problem with our study, and it's a problem in science today, a big problem,” Schmitz tells Inverse. “We don't know where the meteorites that dominate the flux come from in the asteroid belt.”

The view held for years has been a simple one: that different meteorites came from different bodies in the asteroid belt and made their way to Earth. But from the evidence Schmitz collected, it seems like, improbably, most meteorites that come to Earth might be from the same parent body.

The findings of his globetrotting adventures are detailed in a study published Monday in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

WHAT’S NEW — Meteorites are pieces of asteroids or comets that have broken off from their parent body and traveled through space to land on Earth.

Scientists believe that the meteorites that have fallen on Earth so far date back to major events of asteroids breaking off in space, leading to a cascade of meteorites crash landing on our planet.

But Schmitz, lead author of the new study, and his team looked at the history of asteroid collisions and compared them against asteroids as old as 500 million years. They didn’t match with any known collision event. What’s more, they seemed to come from an area of the asteroid belt that has yet to be identified.

“It’s a big conundrum, a big enigma,” Schmitz says.

After collecting rock samples, the researchers burnt away at the samples using hydrochloric acid.Birger Schmitz. After collecting one ton of rock and samples from each site, the researchers place the samples in hydrochloric acid. What is left of the sample is tiny residue, and they are then able to recover the extraterrestrial chrome-spinel grains.

Extraterrestrial chrome-spinel grains are the only common mineral found in meteorites that are known to survive long-term weathering on Earth.

“We looked for tiny, tiny needles in the big haystack,” Schmitz says. “So we basically burn the haystack.”

HERE’S THE BACKGROUND — Scientists have long theorized that meteorites were delivered to Earth by way of the cascading model, where large asteroids break apart to generate populations of new fragments that travel through the inner Solar System for an extended period of time.

Their study suggests that instead of tracing back to different asteroid break-off events, the source of the meteorites was uniform. But the authors aren't exactly sure what that source is, or how the meteorites came to land on Earth. However, a few things have been inferred:

The majority of meteorites come from a very small region of the asteroid belt.

The process that pushes them to Earth has been remarkably stable over the past 500 million years or so.

WHY IT MATTERS — Meteorites that have landed on Earth can inform us of the origin story of the Solar System and its planets.

Nicholas Castle of the Planetary Science Institute, who was not involved with the study, is interested in meteorites because he wants to understand how planets formed and evolved over time. Understanding more about these meteorites can build a picture of our origin story.

“Most meteorites date back towards the very early days of the Solar System,” Castle tells Inverse. “So that's sort of our first clues for how did we go from big gas clouds to solid material.”

Another reason is to protect our planet from a potential asteroid impact in the future by studying and identifying the different types of asteroids that pass through the Solar System.

“Meteorites tell us something about what type of objects threaten us in the future,” Schmitz says. “What type of objects do we have to be particularly aware of.”

WHAT’S NEXT — The recent study has opened up a new mystery regarding the flying space rocks that often land on Earth, and the only way to solve the mystery is by catching more of these meteorites as they make their way to our planet.

Abstract: The meteoritic material falling on Earth is believed to derive from large break-up or cratering events in the asteroid belt. The flux of extraterrestrial material would then vary in accordance with the timing of such asteroid family-forming events. In order to validate this, we investigated marine sediments representing 15 timewindows in the Phanerozoic for content of micrometeoritic relict chrome-spinel grains (>32 μm). We compare these data with the timing of the 15 largest break-up events involving chrome-spinel–bearing asteroids (S- and V-types). Unexpectedly, our Phanerozoic time windows show a stable flux dominated by ordinary chondrites similar to today’s flux. Only in the mid-Ordovician, in connection with the breakup of the L-chondrite parent body, do we observe an anomalous micrometeorite regime with a two to three orders-of-magnitude increase in the flux of L-chondritic chrome-spinel grains to Earth. This corresponds to a one order-of-magnitude excess in the number of impact craters in the mid-Ordovician following the L-chondrite break-up, the only resolvable peak in Phanerozoic cratering rates indicative of an asteroid shower. We argue that meteorites and small (<1-km-sized) asteroids impacting Earth mainly sample a very small region of orbital space in the asteroid belt. This selectiveness has been remarkably stable over the past 500 Ma.


TOPICS: Astronomy; Science
KEYWORDS: meteorites; origin

1 posted on 06/08/2021 6:14:49 PM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: LibWhacker

I thought they come from the skies but if there’s some $$$$ Grant Money in a study, I’m up for it.


2 posted on 06/08/2021 6:16:06 PM PDT by BipolarBob (I wish I was 14 again so I could ruin my life in a completely different way. I've got ideas.)
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To: LibWhacker

From Uranus. Whoops! That’s ass-teroids.


3 posted on 06/08/2021 6:19:57 PM PDT by EvilCapitalist (I voted for prosperity, and I got poverty.)
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To: LibWhacker

The study says there is a periodic force which hurtles asteroids at us from a specific region of space.

Not saying it’s Aliens, but...


4 posted on 06/08/2021 6:21:22 PM PDT by algore
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To: LibWhacker
“What type of objects do we have to be particularly aware of.”

Big ones.

5 posted on 06/08/2021 6:31:31 PM PDT by 17th Miss Regt
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To: algore
"It's the bugs. The god damned bugs whacked us Johnny..."


6 posted on 06/08/2021 6:33:33 PM PDT by EEGator
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To: LibWhacker

China, like everything else?


7 posted on 06/08/2021 6:34:56 PM PDT by aMorePerfectUnion (“Old wood best to burn, old wine to drink, old friends to trust, and old authors to read.” )
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To: LibWhacker

Tiamat


8 posted on 06/08/2021 6:53:04 PM PDT by Openurmind (The ultimate test of a moral society is the kind of world it leaves to its children. ~ D. Bonhoeffer)
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To: LibWhacker

Not that big a mystery. Every year we get meteor showers that are from a known comet. All these results mean is that a big comet was shedding it’s stuff slowly. The fragments then come into contact with Earth


9 posted on 06/08/2021 7:05:57 PM PDT by Nateman (If the Left Is not screaming , you are doing it wrong..)
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To: LibWhacker

I think a wandering planet struck the planet between Mars and Jupiter and destroyed the planet with most of the planets’ became the asteroid belt and the rest became comets and meteors.


10 posted on 06/08/2021 7:57:59 PM PDT by Blood of Tyrants (“Unlimited power in the hands of limited people always leads to cruelty.” ― Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn,)
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To: EEGator

I laughed so hard at that reference.


11 posted on 06/08/2021 8:09:23 PM PDT by Valpal1
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To: Blood of Tyrants

This article may interest you. It looks like two, maybe 3 recent meteors/comets and maybe interstellar iron found in Australia and Antarctica came out of the interstellar cloud we’re cruising through now. Voyager 1 found ‘weak but persistent’ plasma waves locked to a certain frequency. Maybe the local asteroid belt isn’t the only thing shooting rocks at us!

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/technology/brazil-fireball-could-be-another-object-from-outside-the-solar-system/ar-AAKNjgO?ocid=msedgntp


12 posted on 06/08/2021 9:31:43 PM PDT by blueplum ("...this moment is your moment: it belongs to you... " President Donald J. Trump, Jan 20, 2017) )
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To: LibWhacker

Turns out there’s a gigantanourmoustrosity of a Dennis the Menace out there, shooting rocks from his slingshot at us. Oh, that Dennis!!


13 posted on 06/08/2021 11:01:18 PM PDT by _longranger81 (God help us, Every One. )
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To: LibWhacker
They come from Krypton.

Blnk

Blnk
14 posted on 06/08/2021 11:59:53 PM PDT by minnesota_bound (I need more money. )
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To: LibWhacker

Maybe vindicate Astronomer Tom Van Flandern’s exploding planet hypothesis eventually?


15 posted on 06/09/2021 3:37:06 AM PDT by PIF (They came for me and mine ... now its your turn)
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To: Valpal1

Glad to be of service.

We all know the meteorites come from the quarantine zone, specifically the bugs home planet of Klendathu….


16 posted on 06/09/2021 3:54:03 AM PDT by EEGator
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