Friday, June 3, 2011

What are meteorites?


RECOVERED METEORITES 
Most meteorites are discovered accidentally years af­ter they fall. Of some three dozen meteorite falls weighing more than a ton only a few were seen de­scending. Not many falls are ever recovered: Most meteorites land in the oceans or in unoccupied places, where their fall is not likely to be observed. No known record tells of a community destroyed or an individual killed by a meteorite in spite of some close calls. Approximately 3000 meteorite specimens have been recovered and catalogued for study.
Meteorites striking the earth have probably formed thousands of craters, but only 200 or so have been found. One great collision in 10,000 years is a conser­vative estimate, and at that rate at least 50,000 giant meteorites must have fallen on the earth in the past 500 million years. But the fossil craters left by many of these may lie buried and unnoticed in the earth's crust. Probably most of them have been obliterated by weathering, erosion, and geological processes.
One that we know about, near Winslow, Arizona, is the Barringer meteorite crater, created by a meteorite weighing at least 30,000 tons. It struck the earth about 24,000 years ago and must have devas­tated all plant and animal life within a large area. The crater is over 1 kilometer across. Thirty tons of shat­tered iron fragments have been picked up within about 6 kilometers of the crater.
At 7 A.M. on June 30, 1908, a tremendous fireball flashed across the sky in Siberia. A great fall of flame brighter than the sun was seen leaping from a forested region near the Tunguska River. The sight of the fire was followed by the sound of an explosion powerful enough to level trees within 50 or so kilometers. Earth tremors were recorded on seismographs throughout Europe yet no large crater was formed, only many small ones. The most plausible explanation for the event is that a small comet (possibly part of comet Encke) or a large, fragile, stony meteorite struck the earth, dissipated its kinetic energy on the forest and the ground, and completely vaporized.
Three classes of meteorites have been established based on their chemical and metallurgical properties:
also These generally have a relatively smooth, brown or grayish, fused crust indented with pits and cavities. Buried inside all but a small fraction of them are small pieces of glassy minerals, called chondrules, that ap­parently formed from molten droplets, presumably during the formation of the solar system.
  1. One subgroup of the stones is the carbonaceous chondrites, which contain large amounts of carbon, water, and other volatiles that would have been driven off with the slightest heating above about 500 K. Therefore these are the most primeval samples of mat­ter from the early solar system that we have. They are doubly interesting because they contain organic com­pounds, such as hydrocarbons, amino acids, and lip­ids. These biologically important compounds evi­dently formed in the primordial solar nebula without the assistance of living organisms. 
  2.  Stony-iron meteorites are a mix of stone and iron. Their brownish crust sometimes contains pock­ets of the yellow mineral olivine. Inside the meteorite the iron may have a veinlike or globular structure. 
  3. Iron meteorites are almost exclusively composed of iron, with some nickel. They are easily identified by their characteristic pitted, brownish exterior and high density. Cut, etched, and polished, they usually have a peculiar crystalline pattern unlike any in terrestrial iron. They show evidence of melting and signs of other heating and cooling processes. 

Stones are the most brittle kind of meteorite, and they are more fragile than the irons. Even though most falls are stones, more of the recovered meteorites are irons because they are relatively easy to identify and they resist weathering.
Those meteorites that have been dated by thei r natural radioactivity average tens of millions of years for the stones and 600 million years for the irons. These are their ages only since the breakup of the larger mass of which they were probably a part. The most ancient specimens are about 4.6 billion years old, the same age as the earth. The chemical and min­eralogical sequences in the different classes of mete­orites indicate that they share the same heritage as that of the rest of the solar system.
We are still not sure of the origin of meteorites. Are they the remains of comets? Perhaps, but the support­ing evidence for this idea is not strong. Another line of speculation is that most meteorites may be descended from a few chemically differentiated asteroids, whit­tled down by repeated collisions early in the planetary system's history. In such a case stony meteorites come from the original crusts, the stony irons from the inter­mediate parts, and the irons from the core. Regardless of our ability to understand their origins, it is evident that asteroids and meteorites are representatives of the unused building material from which the terres­trial planets formed at the birth of the solar system.