[meteorite-list] NPA 10-15-2000 Tagish Lake Meteorite May Give Clues To Life Origins
From: MARK BOSTICK <thebigcollector_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Thu Nov 25 13:46:03 2004 Message-ID: <BAY4-F2278D2D818AC96713C526B3B90_at_phx.gbl> Paper: Star Herald City: Scottsbluff, Nebraska Date: Sunday, October 15, 2000 Page: 4B (Science Section) Carbon-rich meteorite may give clues to life origins WASHINGTON (AP) - In a search for new clues about the origin of life, researchers worldwide are analyzing bits of a bus-sized meteorite that blazed in Earth last January in a spectacular fireball, giving science that most pristine primordial matter ever recovered. The meteorite, estimated to weigh about 220 tons when it smashed into the atmosphere, shattered before it hit the ground and sprayed bits of space rock over a frozen lake in Canada's British Columbia. More than 70 eyewitness saw the fireball and a week later Canadian Jim Brook, while driving on the ice of Tagish Lake spotted bits of the meteorite. Working in minus-20-degree temperatures, Brook collected about two pounds of black, charcoal-like fragments in a plastic bag and stored them in a freezer. Brook's careful handling will allow scientists to study matter that in virtually unchanged since the solar system formed some 4.6 billion years ago, said Peter G. Brown of the University of Western Ontario in London, Ontario, Canada. "There are the most pristine meteorite specimens on the planet right now," said Brown, who is first author of a study appearing Friday in the journal Science. Later expeditions gathered some 410 additional fragments, but by then the material had been sitting in the open for weeks, was most likely contaminated and was beginning to erode. The material is about the consistency of dried mud, and rain can cause it to crumble and wash away. Preliminary tests of the pristine material found it is loaded with organic molecules of the type that some experts have suggested could have been the original raw materials for the formation of life on Earth. "Stuff like (the) Tagish Lake (meteorite) were pelting the early Earth," said Brown. "It is natural to assume that not only could organic molecules have been synthesized in the primordial sop on Earth, but they could have been brought here from an extraterrestrial origin." The meteorite's fireball was detected by satellites, enabling Brown and others to estimate the path of the space rock and track it back into space. They believe the object came from the asteroid belt between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. Brown said the object was probably jolted off a larger body and could have spent millions of years in orbit before being captured by Earth's gravity. Bits of the meteorite have been distributed to a number of labs worldwide, and researchers are painstakingly analyzing it, looking for amino acids and other organic compounds. A report on those studies may be a year away, Brown said. (end) Diagram with article shows the Tagish Lake meteorite orbit and the area of impact. Clear Skies, Mark Bostick www.meteoritearticles.com www.kansasmeteoritesociety.com Received on Thu 25 Nov 2004 01:45:13 PM PST |
StumbleUpon del.icio.us Yahoo MyWeb |