[meteorite-list] Re: Comet: Talking Points, #1
From: Marco Langbroek <marco.langbroek_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Mon Jul 24 06:57:30 2006 Message-ID: <44C4A790.1090405_at_wanadoo.nl> Sterling, did you ever see a cosmic dust particle under the microscope, let alone have you searched for them? I did. I searched for and found cosmic spherules in sediment samples from an archaeological excavation. (you see: I like experimentation too. When the results of the SEM investigation on one of the particles done by a friend of mine who studies cosmic dust as a profession came in, I did not open a beer as I don't like beer, but a good bottle of wine) What we are talking about here is a significant flux of large meteoroids entering our atmosphere and creating airbursts (given the lack of impact craters), if this theory is correct. As they disintegrate in the atmosphere they enrich it with dust. Not just fine dust. Dust in the range of a few micron to up to half a millimeter. The fine dust capable of blocking sunlight by being airborn for a long time, is only part of the equation. And such events leave their detectable mark in lake deposits, dune deposits, deep sea deposits, ice deposits, peat deposits. Here is such a case of a detectable dust layer in Antarctic ice (camouflaged by abundant tephra layers in the same ice deposit, and still then it has been found). And this one the researchers believe was due to one, only one, big meteor event over the area: - Harvey, R. P. et al., 1995: A Meteoritic Event Layer in Antarctic Ice. Meteoritics 30:5, p. 517 If the skies of AD 540 dayly resounded with thunder from meteoric airbursts, the enhanced dust influx due to it should be visible. And cosmic origin dust, due to not only its isotopic but also its petrological signatures, is recognizable as such, nothwithstanding all your blah blah. One of my friends made a career out of it. - Marco ----- Dr Marco Langbroek Dutch Meteor Society (DMS) e-mail: meteorites_at_dmsweb.org private website http://home.wanadoo.nl/marco.langbroek DMS website http://www.dmsweb.org ----- Received on Mon 24 Jul 2006 06:57:20 AM PDT |
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