18th February 2016
N ew sadem ic.com
™
- British English edition
page
14
A
n tar c tic
m eteorites
Many meteorites have been found
either in dry deserts or in Antarcti
ca. This is because they are easier to
spot in these places. Meteorites ei
ther contain a small amount o f iron
(rocky) or are mainly made o f iron
(iron-rich). Researchers have been
puzzled why nearly all meteorites
found in Antarctica are rocky. Sci
entists working at a UK university
now think that they know why.
Searching fo r m eteorites in Antarctica (R Score)
Meteors are pieces o f space rock.
They can be many different sizes.
Meteors become very hot and burn
up as they fall through the Earth’s
atmosphere. If this happens after the
Sun has gone down, a bright trail of
light can be seen in the night sky.
This is known as a ‘shooting star’.
If a meteor falls to the surface o f the
Earth before it has completely burnt
up, it’s called a meteorite.
M ost meteorites originally came
from the asteroid belt. This is be
tween Mars and Jupiter. The aster
oid belt is a region o f space where
there are many bits o f rock, or rub
ble. These were ‘leftover’ when the
planets in our Solar System formed
billions o f years ago. This ring, or
belt, o f bits o f rock stretches all the
way around the Sun. Pieces o f rock
in the asteroid belt range from a
few kilometres wide to the size o f a
piece o f dust.
In the past large asteroids or space
rocks hit the other rocky planets:
Mercury, Venus, and Mars. They
also crashed into the Moon. The
force o f these impacts threw rocks
high up beyond the planet’s gravita
tional field. M ost meteorites found
on the Earth travelled from the aster
oid belt. Yet some came from M er
cury, Venus, Mars, and the Moon.
Meteorites that come from the
asteroid belt are usually about four
billion years old. This is because
they cooled and turned into rock
soon after the formation o f the Solar
System. Mercury, Venus, Mars, and
the Moon were volcanically active
for far longer. So, meteorites from
these places are much younger.
Large ice sheets cover Antarctica.
Ice streams form part o f the ice sheets.
They move towards the sea very slow
ly. Meteorites that fall on Antarctica
become buried in ice. They are carried
towards the sea by the ice streams.
This can take thousands o f years.
Many meteorites that land in Antarc
tica are therefore lost in the sea.
However, there are a few places
where meteorites are gathered to
gether by the ice streams. W hat’s
more, they appear on top o f the ice.
These places are known as ‘strand
ing zones’. Antarctica is divided into
East Antarctica and West Antarc
tica. They are separated by a moun
tain range called the Transantarctic
Mountains. Some ice streams in
East Antarctica meet this mountain
range. Here, strong winds strip away
the top layer o f ice. This exposes the
meteorites. Thus, over thousands of
years, hundreds o f meteorites can
collect at the stranding zones.
The scientists think that there
are many iron-rich meteorites at
these stranding zones, but they are
under the ice. They set up an experi
ment. The scientists froze a rocky
and an iron-rich meteorite inside a
big block o f ice. Both were about
the same size. A lamp above the
ice block acted like the Sun. The
iron-rich meteorite absorbed more
heat than the rocky one. It therefore
slowly sank deeper into the ice.
The scientists believe that the
ice streams take many iron-rich
meteorites to the stranding zones.
Yet as the wind strips away the ice,
these meteorites are warmed by the
Sun. Then, they sink back into the
ice. If the scientists are right, there
could be a layer o f iron-rich me
teorites about 75 centimetres (30
inches) below the ice at the strand
ing zones. The scientists now plan
to use metal detectors to look for
them. □
W
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |