--- !signs/object:Article attributes: title: ""Giant Fireball" Impact in Peru Upends Meteorite Theory" source: National Geographic author: summary: "A meteorite that smacked into the Peruvian highlands last September may have punched holes into long-held theories about how such meteorites, called chondrites, interact with Earth's atmosphere. Chondrites are stony chunks of asteroid, likely common in space, that contain materials similar to those found in Earth's crust.
The Real Thing The most likely alternative was that the impact was simply the largest of a widely strewn field of meteor fragments, and the scientists found only only one crater. The fabricated-meteorite-crater theory was then ruled out when Schultz's team found "shock" features and intricate mixing of the meteoritic dust in the surrounding rock, indicating that something had indeed crashed into it. The question is how the meteor-which Schultz estimates to have been roughly the equivalent of a three- to six-foot-long (one- to two-meter-long) boulder-managed to stick together and retain its speed, rather than dispersing into a shotgun blast of small fragments. In research presented today at the Lunar and Planetary Science Conference in League City, Texas, Schultz and colleagues suggested that the fragments might have been trapped and smoothed into an aerodynamic shape by the shock wave created by their movement through the atmosphere. He compares it to the way sediments in a streambed can be shaped by flowing water. "Rather than flying apart," he told National Geographic News, "[perhaps] it shaped into a needle and pierced the atmosphere." Owen B. Toon, an atmospheric scientist at the University of Colorado at Boulder who was not involved in the study, finds it "quite interesting." "We know from impacts such as Tunguska [a Russian crater from a 1908 impact] that fairly large objects [half a football field in diameter] can blow up in the atmosphere and leave no crater or obvious debris field on the ground," he said by email. "The behavior is related to the strength of the material, since iron objects of this size leave a large crater behind. Hopefully Peter [Schultz] will learn more about the crater and impactor in this article so that we can understand better how it reached the surface." Protection Needed Regardless of what happened, Schultz wants to see the crater protected for future research. Humans rarely see a meteorite landing, he said-for instance, "Meteor Crater [in Arizona] is 50,000 years old." (See a photo of Meteor Crater.) Furthermore, the Peruvian meteor's surprising arrival raises the question of how many more meteors may have crashed into Earth in a similar fashion." comment: "" date: Wed Mar 12 12:27:00 -0400 2008 type: Article id: "150892" votes: "20" link: "http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2008/03/080311-peru-meteor.html" classification_id: "14"