Thursday, 21 November 2013
On 16:04 by Asveth Sreiram No comments
The work of Munir Humayun -- a professor in FSU's Department of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Science and a researcher at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory (MagLab) -- is based on an analysis of a 4.4 billion-year-old Martian meteorite that was unearthed by Bedouin tribesmen in the Sahara desert. The rock (NWA 7533) may be the first recognized sample of ancient Martian crust and holds a wealth of information about the origin and age of the Red Planet's crust.
Humayun's groundbreaking discoveries about the crust and what it reveals about the Red Planet's origins will be published in the journal Nature.
In order to detect minute amounts of chemicals in this meteorite, Humayun and his collaborators performed complex analysis on the meteorite using an array of highly sophisticated mass spectrometers in the MagLab's geochemistry department. High concentrations of trace metals such as iridium, an element that indicates meteoritic bombardment, showed that this meteorite came from the elusive cratered area of Mars' southern highlands.
"This cratered terrain has been long thought to hold the keys to Mars' birth and early childhood," Humayun said.
While craters cover more than half of Mars, this is the first meteoric sample to come from this area and the first time researchers are able to understand Mars' early crustal growth.
Using the chemical information found in pieces of soil contained in the meteorite, the researchers were able to calculate the thickness of Mars' crust. Their calculation aligned with estimates from independent spacecraft measurements and confirms that Mars did not experience a giant impact that melted the entire planet in its early history.
Using a powerful microprobe at Curtin University in Perth, Australia, the team dated special crystals within the meteorite -- called zircons -- at an astounding 4.4 billion years old.
"This date is about 100 million years after the first dust condensed in the solar system," Humayun said. "We now know that Mars had a crust within the first 100 million years of the start of planet building, and that Mars' crust formed concurrently with the oldest crusts on Earth and the Moon."
Humayun and his collaborators hypothesize that these trailblazing discoveries are just the tip of the iceberg of what continued research on this unique meteorite will uncover. Further studies may reveal more clues about the impact history of Mars, the nature of Martian zircons and the makeup of the earliest sediments on the Red Planet.
Humayun's international team of collaborators include curator of meteorites Brigitte Zanda with the National Museum of Natural History (the Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle) in Paris; A. Nemchin, M. Grange and A. Kennedy with Curtin University's Department of Applied Geology in Perth, Australia; and scientists R.H. Hewins, J.P. Lorand, C. Göpel, C. Fieni, S. Pont and D. Deldicque
.
.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Search
Popular Posts
-
What you'll need: Baking Soda (make sure it's not baking powder) Vinegar A container to hold everything and avoid a big mess...
-
What you'll need: A plastic comb (or an inflated balloon) A narrow stream of water from a tap Dry hair Instructions: Tu...
-
Nov. 18, 2013 — Why do the faces of some primates contain so many different colors -- black, blue, red, orange and white -- that are mixe...
-
Jan. 8, 2014 — Today the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS) Collaboration announced that BOSS has measured the scale of the u...
-
Aug. 29, 2013 — It's a fiercely debated question amongst palaeontologists: was the giant 'terror bird', which lived in Europ...
-
Nov. 20, 2013 — A computer program called the Never Ending Image Learner (NEIL) is running 24 hours a day at Carnegie Mellon University, ...
-
Sep. 18, 2013 — NASA satellites may have missed more than 50% of the phytoplankton in the Southern Ocean, making it far more difficult to...
-
What is the unit of force? The SI unit of force is newton(N)
-
Sep. 17, 2013 — Human influences have directly impacted the latitude/altitude pattern of atmospheric temperature. That is the conclusion ...
-
Oct. 17, 2013 — Supermassive black holes: every large galaxy's got one. But here's a real conundrum: how did they grow so big? ...
Recent Posts
Sample Text
Blog Archive
-
▼
2013
(421)
-
▼
November
(38)
- Mach 1000 Shock Wave Lights Supernova Remnant
- Archaeological Discoveries Confirm Early Date of B...
- Scientists Find Brain Region That Helps You Make U...
- Even If Emissions Stop, Carbon Dioxide Could Warm ...
- Colossal New Predatory Dino Terrorized Early Tyran...
- Does Obesity Reshape Our Sense of Taste?
- The Era of Neutrino Astronomy Has Begun
- Two Y Genes Can Replace the Entire Y Chromosome fo...
- Monster Gamma-Ray Burst in Our Cosmic Neighborhood
- Genomic Variant Associated With Sun Sensitivity, F...
- Brain Regions Can Be Specifically Trained With Vid...
- Computer Searches Web 24/7 to Analyze Images and T...
- Specially Designed Nanostructured Materials Can In...
- Black Holes Don't Make a Big Splash
- Neanderthal Viruses Found in Modern Humans
- Skeletal Remains of 24,000-Year-Old Boy Raise New ...
- Secrets of Mars' Birth Revealed from Unique Meteorite
- CT and 3-D Printers Used to Recreate Dinosaur Fossils
- World's Smallest FM Radio Transmitter
- Biologists Find an Evolutionary Facebook for Monke...
- The Big Male Nose: Why Men's Noses Are Bigger Than...
- Bacteria Recycle Broken DNA: Modern Bacteria Can A...
- Evidence Found for Granite On Mars: Red Planet Mor...
- Hubble Reveals First Scrapbook Pictures of Milky W...
- Astronomers Reveal Contents of Mysterious Black Ho...
- Better Batteries Through Biology? Modified Viruses...
- Evidence of 3.5-Billion-Year-Old Bacterial Ecosyst...
- Thin, Active Invisibility Cloak Demonstrated for F...
- Clay May Have Been Birthplace of Life On Earth, Ne...
- How Pigeons May Smell Their Way Home
- How Common Are Habitable Planets? One in Five Sun-...
- Fossil of Largest Known Platypus Discovered in Aus...
- Physicist Discovers Black Holes in Globular Star C...
- Life, but Not as We Know It: Rudimentary Form of L...
- Global Warming Led to Dwarfism in Mammals -- Twice
- Synaptic Transistor Learns While It Computes
- Surprising Variation Among Genomes of Individual N...
- Magnetic 'Force Field' Shields Giant Gas Cloud Dur...
-
▼
November
(38)
0 comments:
Post a Comment