Posted on 09/23/2023 11:13:33 AM PDT by nickcarraway
Geologists have recently discovered two alien minerals unknown to Earth in a meteorite in Somalia. A small, 2.5 ounce (70-gram) fragment of the fifteen thousand kilogram fallen comet known as El Ali revealed the alien ore.
Scientists stumbled upon the unknown mineral in the meteorite while sampling a slice. It was only after analyzing the segment in a lab that they realized they had discovered something completely new.
Alien minerals in El Ali meteorite Researchers, scientists, and geologists are excited by the revelation, as it might help them understand more about asteroids and how they form as well as the possibility of locating more.
Live Science magazine reports the curator and professor in the Department of Earth & Atmospheric Sciences at the University of Alberta Chris Herd as having stated:
Whenever you find a new mineral, it means that the actual geological conditions, the chemistry of the rock, was different than what’s been found before. That’s what makes this exciting: In this particular meteorite you have two officially described minerals that are new to science.
Grecian Delight supports Greece Herd named one of the alien deposits ‘elaliite’ after the El Ali meteorite. The other he termed ‘elkinstantonite’ after Professor Lindy Elkins-Tanto, the vice president of the Interplanetary Initiative at Arizona State University. Elkins-Tanton is also the chief investigator of what they call the ‘Psyche’ mission, part of the NASA operation to reach the Asteroid Psyche 16 by 2023.
How asteroids form Elkins-Tanton is famous for her work on the formation of asteroids, which the foreign elements may help in deciphering. For that reason, Herd named one after her, saying that:
Lindy has done a lot of work on how the cores of planets form, how these iron nickel cores form, and the closest analogue we have are iron meteorites. So it made sense to name a mineral after her and recognize her contributions to science.
Asteroid-Earth Asteroid-Earth. Credit: Sebastian Kaulitzki/Science Photo Library/Corbis, CC-ZERO / Wikimedia Commons The El Ali meteorite is composed of more than three hundred unfamiliar IAB elements and iron. Nevertheless, the discovery of something non-native to Earth came as a surprise to all. This is something that Herd’s colleague, Dr. Andrew Locock, affirmed.
“The very first day he did some analysis he said ‘You’ve got at least two new minerals here,'” Locock said.
Herd called upon his colleague, Locock, to study the segments they found. Locock is an expert in identifying formerly unknown minerals and possesses a wealth of knowledge on how asteroids form.
Nightfall Researchers came upon the El Ali meteorite in 2020. That, apparently, was when most of the world found out about it.
According to IFLScience, however, it had had a long history in the oral culture and ancient folklore of the Saar people of Somalia eons before Western scientists learned about it.
The Saars sang songs of its mystery, mightiness, and magic for over five centuries. They also glorified it in poetry and dance and even used it to sharpen their knives, perhaps out of practicality.
Alien minerals, so from Mexico?
Krponite or unobatanium
What about Kryptonite? No Kryptonite?
-PJ
What’s an “unknown mineral”?
I understand an “unknown element” - which would be front page news. Of course, since the article has absolutely no science behind it save for the mention of an “unknown mineral”, the article is not worth a second thought until we get someone with a STEM background to look further. Perhaps we could get noted scientists such as the CNN/MSNBC staff to analyze it. After all, they know everything about climate and COVID. Their analysis could be reviewed by Al Gore for believable verification.
It would have been nice if they gave the chemical formula or composition.
CLICKBAIT!
No mention of the elements involved...except iron nickel cores in other meteors. Article confuses elements with minerals. No mention of the crystal structure, melting point, etc of the mineral.
Unknown? Well yeah, since geologists haven’t sampled every rock found in every geological structure on earth. Has anything specifically to do with alien geology? Conjectural.
Went to original site. Got lots of ads for visiting Greece.
Verdict: CLICKBAIT and “filler” news.
“Alien minerals, so from Mexico?”
Migrant minerals.
“CLICKBAIT!”
Yeah, “Greek Reporter” was a big hint.
The minerals are compounds, not new elements.
I agree. Either the mineral is a compound of known elements, or there are new elements previously unknown. Either way, the article should’ve mentioned it.
I’m always on the lookout for “luckydaysium” — the mineral from the sky that provides healing for all diseases and a solution to the debt problems of the world.
Wake me when they find something really interesting, like an eyeball ... or a used condom.
"...The El Ali meteorite is composed of more than three hundred unfamiliar IAB elements and iron...."
Idiot drops that sentence into the mix without bothering to explain what IAB elements are, giving some (with a basic knowledge of physical science but no specialization in meteoritics) to believe that the Periodic Table suddenly more than doubled in size. But it's just 300+ extra ingredients among the sub-class of meteorites arbitrarily designated as "IAB," nothing to do new new "elements" in the atomic sense.
What makes a mineral "new" (which he also fails to explain) is a composition and/or crystalline structure never before observed in naturally-occurring materials. The only real news in the entire article but he fails to detail what these new compositions or crystalline structures are.
Wait, what?
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