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Scientists find the ghost of a new mineral by Brooks Hays Washington (UPI) Apr 17, 2019 Researchers have identified the "ghosts" of a new mineral at a pair of ancient meteorite impact sites. The mineral is a new type of monazite, which only forms under the high-pressure conditions created by meteorite impacts. Scientists found the new mineral after examining rock samples from impact craters in Germany and Canada. Researchers used an electron scanning microscope to study the tiny rock fragments. "We found microscopic evidence that monazite, a rare earth element phosphate, transformed to another crystal structure under high pressure from a shockwave, similar to how graphite can turn into diamond under pressure," Nick Timms, an associate professor of earth and planetary sciences at Curtin University in Australia, said in a news release. Interestingly, the new mineral form didn't last. It came and went. But Timms and his colleagues were able to see the mineral's ghostly signature. "The mineral reverted to its original crystal structure instead of maintaining this new structural form, and while the new mineral only existed for fractions of a second as the shockwave passed through the Earth close to ground zero, it left unique crystallographic clues to its existence," Timms said. Timms suggests it's possible scientists will never directly observe the new mineral. "The mineral is not stable at the Earth's surface and readily transforms back to monazite again," he said. "Therefore, we have really only seen, and will probably only ever see, its 'ghost.'" Researchers described their ghostly discovery this week in the journal Geology.
NASA instruments image fireball over Bering Sea Pasadena CA (JPL) Mar 24, 2019 On Dec. 18, 2018, a large "fireball" - the term used for exceptionally bright meteors that are visible over a wide area - exploded about 16 miles (26 kilometers) above the Bering Sea. The explosion unleashed an estimated 173 kilotons of energy, or more than 10 times the energy of the atomic bomb blast over Hiroshima during World War II. Two NASA instruments aboard the Terra satellite captured images of the remnants of the large meteor. The image sequence shows views from five of nine cameras on th ... read more
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