Thursday, October 17, 2013

Meteorite pulled from Russian lake







































Divers dragged the rock to shore on a metal sheet










Divers working at a Russian lake have recovered a half-tonne chunk of the space rock that exploded over Chelyabinsk earlier this year.


The object plunged into Lake Chebarkul in central Russia on 15 February, leaving a 6m-wide hole in the ice.


Scientists say that it is the largest fragment of the meteorite yet found.


More than 1,000 people were injured when a 17m, 10,000-tonne space rock burned up over Central Russia, breaking windows and rocking buildings.



Continue reading the main story

Identifying meteorites






  • During the fiery plunge through the atmosphere, a thin layer of rock on the surface melts. This black layer is known as the "fusion crust"

  • The surface of a meteorite is generally smooth and featureless, but will often have shallow depressions called regmaglypts that resemble thumb-prints

  • Dr Caroline Smith says these form during the fireball stage, "as vortices of hot gases scour away (ablate is the correct term) the surface of the meteoroid".

  • They generally have a high density compared with Earth rocks and often contain some iron-nickel metal, which may make them magnetic

  • Meteorites are almost never round - they are irregular in shape and come in a variety of sizes

Live footage showed a team pull out a 1.5-metre-long (five-foot-long) rock from the lake after first wrapping it in a special covering and placing it on a metal sheet while it was still underwater.


The fragment was then pulled ashore and placed on top of a scale for weighing, an operation that quickly went wrong.


The rock broke up into at least three large pieces as it was lifted from the ground with the help of levers and ropes.


Then the scale itself broke, the moment it hit the 570kg (1,255lb) mark.


Dr Caroline Smith, curator of meteorites at London's Natural History Museum, confirmed that the object was a meteorite from characteristic features known as fusion crust and regmaglypts, which are obvious in images.


She told BBC News: "Fusion crust forms as the meteoroid is travelling through the atmosphere as a fireball.


"The outer surface gets so hot it melts the rock to form a dark, glassy surface crust which we term a fusion crust. Regmaglypts are the indentations, that look a bit like thumbprints, also seen on the surface of the meteorite."



Sergey Zamozdra, an associate professor at Chelyabinsk State University, told the Interfax news agency: "The preliminary examination... shows that this is really a fraction of the Chelyabinsk meteorite.


"This chunk is most probably one of the top 10 biggest meteorite fragments ever found."


The divers' mission had been hampered by a number of factors. The rock fragment lay at 13m depth, not 6m or 8m as was originally thought.


The Vesti 24 rolling news channel reported that divers had already recovered more than 12 pieces from Lake Chebarkul since the incident on 15 February.


The station said that only four or five of them had turned out to be real meteorites.





























Eyewitnesses and CCTV cameras captured the moment the meteor flew across the sky in February











Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-24550941#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa
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