Meteorite

Australian ‘bush glass’ bears the fingerprints of a cosmic collision with an iron meteorite

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, April 3, 2024

One of the best ways to find out is by looking at rocks from space.

Key Points: 
  • One of the best ways to find out is by looking at rocks from space.
  • Sending spacecraft to asteroids or other planets to gather samples and bring them home is possible, but extremely difficult and expensive.
  • Another option is to study space rocks that fall to Earth: meteorites.

Natural glasses


We’re all familiar with the human-made kind of glass found in windowpanes and kitchenware. But glass occurs in nature, too. Most of it is obsidian, the glass produced in volcanoes which has been known since ancient times.

  • A much smaller amount of natural glass is produced by lightning strikes and asteroid impacts.
  • When we find glass in nature, it can take careful forensic work to pinpoint what created it.


The meteorites recovered from the Henbury field are a type called IIIAB irons. They are remnants of the metallic core of an ancient shattered world and were eventually delivered to Earth. They’re essentially lumps of metal, comprised mostly of iron, nickel and cobalt.

Heavy metal–classic rock fusion


When the space rock struck at Henbury, the heat of the impact melted the meteorite along with rock from the ground. Some of this fused material formed molten droplets which was thrown from the craters and cooled to form thumb-sized lumps that look a lot like volcanic glass.

  • This revealed the glass contained elements from the local sandstone as well as high levels of iron, nickel and cobalt – much more than we found in exposed rocks in the craters.
  • These results suggest the glass is made of about 10% melted meteorite.
  • The Henbury glass also contained elevated levels of chromium, iridium and other elements from the platinum group.

Meteorite glass around the world

  • Such high levels of meteorite residue in glass have not been reported from other Australian craters.
  • Similar glass has been described at two other sites, both younger and smaller than the largest Henbury crater (145m across).
  • Our main motivation to search for meteorite residue in natural glass is that it provides ground-truth evidence for an impact with a celestial object.

More enigmatic glasses

  • There are many reports of enigmatic natural glasses, in places such as Argentina, Australia and elsewhere, whose origins are ambiguous.
  • In many cases no crater is known in the vicinity, such as Libyan desert glass.
  • In the meantime, there are lots of interesting bush glasses that deserve a second look for clues of a cosmic heritage.


Aaron J. Cavosie has received funding from Australian Research Council and the Space Science and Technology Centre at Curtin University.

Carbon America Submits First Class VI CO2 Injection Well Permit to EPA Region 8

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, January 23, 2024

Carbon America has submitted a Class VI CO2 Injection Well permit application to the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) Region 8 office to permanently store carbon dioxide produced by two ethanol plants in northeastern Colorado.

Key Points: 
  • Carbon America has submitted a Class VI CO2 Injection Well permit application to the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) Region 8 office to permanently store carbon dioxide produced by two ethanol plants in northeastern Colorado.
  • "This Class VI CO2 Injection Well permit submission marks a crucial milestone for both Carbon America and the region.
  • The Class VI Underground Injection Control (UIC) program, under the Safe Drinking Water Act, regulates the underground injection of carbon dioxide (CO2).
  • This application for geologic storage in Washington County is the first Class VI permit to be submitted to the Region 8 office.

GK Hair Unveils a Breakthrough | Lightening Powder Masque with Hyaluronic Acid

Retrieved on: 
Friday, December 22, 2023

OAKLAND PARK, Fla., Dec. 22, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- GK Hair, a leader in professional hair care solutions, is excited to introduce its latest innovation exclusively for hair professionals: the "Lightening Powder Masque with Hyaluronic Acid." This advanced product promises a swift and dramatic transformation, setting a new standard for salon-grade results.

Key Points: 
  • OAKLAND PARK, Fla., Dec. 22, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- GK Hair, a leader in professional hair care solutions, is excited to introduce its latest innovation exclusively for hair professionals: the " Lightening Powder Masque with Hyaluronic Acid ."
  • Enriched with Hyaluronic Acid: Formulated to nourish and fortify each strand, leaving hair smoother and more manageable than ever before.
  • GK Hair is thrilled to introduce the ' Lightening Powder Masque with Hyaluronic Acid ' exclusively for professional stylists.
  • Elevate the salon experience with GK Hair's "Lightening Powder Masque with Hyaluronic Acid."

Col&MacArthur launches world's first NASA-approved tech watch containing authentic moon dust on Kickstarter

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, October 4, 2023

LIEGE, Belgium, Oct. 4, 2023 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- Today, Col&MacArthur announced the launch of their latest project on Kickstarter, marking the world's first NASA-approved tech watch embedded with certified moon dust from a meteorite. LUNAR1,622 is a unique timepiece commemorating the historic Apollo XI lunar landing and is the second notable release in the brand's INTERSTELLAR collection. It is available now on the Kickstarter platform starting at $399 USD.

Key Points: 
  • LIEGE, Belgium, Oct. 4, 2023 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- Today, Col&MacArthur announced the launch of their latest project on Kickstarter, marking the world's first NASA-approved tech watch embedded with certified moon dust from a meteorite.
  • LUNAR1,622 is the world's first NASA approved tech watch containing certified moon dust from a meteorite.
  • Each watch comes with a certificate of authenticity from MSG Meteorites, a British firm renowned for their specialization in certified space rocks.
  • "Every nuance, from the authentic moon dust to the meticulous design elements, reflects our unwavering commitment to excellence and our passion for transcending limits.

Meteorite discovery: unusual finds by South African farmer add to space rock heritage

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, September 27, 2023

Meteorites are therefore rightly classified by many countries as an integral part of communal natural heritage and are sought after by museums and private collectors.

Key Points: 
  • Meteorites are therefore rightly classified by many countries as an integral part of communal natural heritage and are sought after by museums and private collectors.
  • Gideon Lombaard, a farmer in the Northern Cape province, reached out to us because he suspected that he had found two meteorite fragments.
  • Mr Lombaard’s double discovery raises South Africa’s tally of confirmed meteorites to 51 – the highest in sub-Saharan Africa.
  • But, compared with the over 14,000 meteorites recovered from the Sahara desert, the number of recovered southern African meteorites is extremely small.

What is a meteorite?

    • Meteorites are usually discovered by someone who notices an unusual rock while out walking (called a “find”).
    • However, around 2% of meteorites are classified as “falls” because they are retrieved after witnessed meteor fireball events.

Discovery and forensics

    • It is thus not surprising that nearly 80% of all meteorites have been found where arid climates aid their preservation, namely Antarctica and the Sahara desert.
    • Meteorites typically become coated in a dark fusion crust during their fiery passage through the atmosphere.
    • That makes the white Antarctic ice and the pale-coloured Sahara bedrock and sand perfect backdrops for searchers.
    • We then used the greater oxidation (rust) of the Wolfkop stone to suggest that its fall predated that of the Brierskop meteorite.

South Africa’s meteorite heritage

    • The South African Heritage Act No.
    • 25 of 1999 classifies South African meteorites as national heritage items that cannot be damaged, removed, exported or traded without a permit issued by the South African Heritage Agency.
    • Prior to the two recent discoveries, the Meteoritical Bulletin Database listed 49 meteorites as having been satisfactorily proved to be from South African sites.

7 years, billions of kilometres, a handful of dust: NASA just brought back the largest-ever asteroid sample

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, September 26, 2023

Inside is likely to be the largest ever sample of dust and rock returned from an asteroid.

Key Points: 
  • Inside is likely to be the largest ever sample of dust and rock returned from an asteroid.
  • Extracted and brought back with great technical ingenuity from an asteroid called Bennu, scientists will now study in search of clues about the origins of the Solar System and life itself.

The origins of the Solar System – and life

    • Most asteroids are the rocky leftovers of failed planets and destructive collisions in the early Solar System, orbiting in a belt between Mars and Jupiter.
    • These primitive bodies – some more than 4.5 billion years old – can also shed light on the origins of life, because they tell us about the distribution of water, minerals and other elements such as carbon.
    • There is also an element of self-interest in studying these asteroids, to understand the risk they may pose if they are heading Earth’s way.
    • There are more than 70,000 meteorites in collections around the world, but we know the origins of less than 0.1% of them.

Bringing pieces of space back to Earth

    • They can bring pieces from a different planet or asteroid back to Earth to study.
    • The first such mission was to the Moon, bringing back lunar samples for analysis.
    • The Hayabusa mission, launched in 2003 by the Japanese space agency, JAXA, returned less than 1 milligram from asteroid Itokawa.
    • We will know for sure once the sample is carefully examined at Johnson Space Centre over the coming days.

The sound of fireballs

    • There are six OSIRIS-REx mission scientists from Curtin (including one of us – Nick Timms), and they will be among those receiving the first wave of samples in the coming weeks.
    • Read more:
      The Hayabusa2 spacecraft is about to drop a chunk of asteroid in the Australian outback

      Fireballs, or really bright shooting stars from large space rocks, are quite rare and impossible to predict.

    • When objects from outer space enter the atmosphere, travelling much faster than the speed of sound, they ignite the air to create a fireball and also trigger other less-studied phenomena such as shockwaves – which can be hazardous.

What’s next?

    • Both of these spacecraft dropped their precious samples to Earth and have continued on with the aim of future asteroid fly-bys.
    • The mission, now renamed “OSIRIS-APEX”, has already begun to redirect itself towards an asteroid called Apophis, which it will intercept not long after the asteroid zooms past Earth in April 2029.

Sahara space rock 4.5 billion years old upends assumptions about the early Solar System

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, August 29, 2023

On close inspection, the rocks turned out to be from outer space: lumps of rubble billions of years old, left over from the dawn of the Solar System.

Key Points: 
  • On close inspection, the rocks turned out to be from outer space: lumps of rubble billions of years old, left over from the dawn of the Solar System.
  • This is one of the most precise ages ever calculated for an object from space – and our results also cast doubt on some common assumptions about the early Solar System.

The secret life of aluminium

    • Among the many elements in this cloud was aluminium, which came in two forms.
    • Aluminium-26 is very useful stuff for scientists who want to understand how the Solar System formed and developed.
    • Because it decays over time, we can use it to date events – particularly within the first four or five million years of the Solar System’s life.

Uranium, lead and age

    • To figure that out, we will need to calculate the absolute ages of some ancient space rocks more precisely.
    • It’s useful for determining the relative ages of different objects, but not their absolute age in years.
    • There are two important isotopes of uranium (uranium-235 and uranium-238), which decay into different isotopes of lead (lead-207 and lead-206, respectively).

Meteorite groups

    • Achondrites are rocks formed from melted planetesimals, which is what we call solid lumps in the cloud of gas and debris that formed the Solar System.
    • Still other achondrites, including Erg Chech 002, are “ungrouped”: their parent bodies and family relationships are unknown.

A clumpy spread of aluminium

    • Measuring the ratios of all the lead and uranium isotopes was what helped us to estimate the age of the rock with such unprecedented accuracy.
    • We also compared our calculated age with previously published aluminium-26 data for Erg Chech 002, as well as data for various other achondrites.
    • This shows aluminium-26 was indeed distributed quite unevenly throughout the cloud of dust and gas which formed the solar system.

MOON-THEMED WATCHES TAKE OVER MARKET

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, April 6, 2023

RICHMOND, Va., April 6, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- Since humans first gazed up at the night sky, the moon has fascinated us. Now, you can carry your own piece of the moon with you everywhere you go.

Key Points: 
  • Now, you can carry your own piece of the moon with you everywhere you go.
  • A new timepiece offered by Stauer, a Richmond-based jewelry company, presents part of an authenticated lunar meteorite in its face.
  • What is a lunar meteorite?
  • It's a piece of the moon that was ejected from the lunar surface following an asteroid impact.

Meteor Education, Creator of ProSocial Learning Environments™ and Experiences™, Secures Growth Investment from Bain Capital Double Impact

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, March 2, 2023

Meteor Education (“Meteor” or “the Company”), an innovative developer of enriching and connected learning environments for K-12 schools, today announced it has received a growth investment from Bain Capital Double Impact .

Key Points: 
  • Meteor Education (“Meteor” or “the Company”), an innovative developer of enriching and connected learning environments for K-12 schools, today announced it has received a growth investment from Bain Capital Double Impact .
  • Founded in 1967, Meteor has helped more than 1,000 K-12 school districts design and create high-impact ProSocial Learning Environments™ that promote collaborative educational experiences.
  • “We founded Meteor to modernize and humanize the learning experience and empower educators and students to reach their full potential.
  • Meteor plays a crucial role in fostering the overall learning experience and elevating student-teacher engagement by transforming school environments,” said Iain Ware, Partner at Bain Capital Double Impact.

Major Corporations Launch New Coalition to Help End HIV in the United States

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, December 1, 2022

Today on World AIDS Day, the Health Action Alliance and ViiV Healthcare announce the launch of U.S. Business Action to End HIV, a new coalition of businesses committed to accelerating progress to end HIV in the U.S. by 2030.

Key Points: 
  • Today on World AIDS Day, the Health Action Alliance and ViiV Healthcare announce the launch of U.S. Business Action to End HIV, a new coalition of businesses committed to accelerating progress to end HIV in the U.S. by 2030.
  • View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20221201005283/en/
    The coalition launch is part of the White Houses World AIDS Day commemoration.
  • U.S. Business Action to End HIV formed in response to the National HIV/AIDS Strategy, which seeks to mobilize all sectors of society in a united response.
  • By harnessing the influence and expertise of the private sector, the coalition brings new momentum to an effort once thought impossible to end the HIV epidemic in the U.S. by 2030.