[meteorite-list] Article - CU-Boulder Researchers to Analyze Meteorite That Fell Outside Berthoud, Colo.

Matt Morgan mmorgan at mhmeteorites.com
Mon Oct 11 16:04:39 EDT 2004


Funny...I do not think any of us in Colorado heard about this
one...anyone????
Matt

-----Original Message-----
From: meteorite-list-bounces at meteoritecentral.com
[mailto:meteorite-list-bounces at meteoritecentral.com] On Behalf Of ken
newton
Sent: Monday, October 11, 2004 2:03 PM
To: meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com
Subject: [meteorite-list] Article - CU-Boulder Researchers to Analyze
Meteorite That Fell Outside Berthoud, Colo.


http://www.ascribe.org/cgi-bin/spew4th.pl?ascribeid=20041011.090710&time
=10%2055%20PDT&year=2004&public=1


AScribe  The Public Interest Newswire
Mon Oct 11 10:55:00 2004 Pacific Time


      CU-Boulder Researchers to Analyze Meteorite That Fell Outside
    Berthoud, Colo.

       BOULDER, Colo., Oct. 11 (AScribe Newswire) -- University of 
Colorado at Boulder researchers will scientifically analyze a meteorite 
that fell outside Berthoud, Colo., last week, only the fifth to ever 
have been seen falling and subsequently recovered in Colorado, experts
say.

       The meteorite weighs more than 2 pounds and is about as large as 
a baseball, although it is irregular in shape. It appears to be made of 
igneous rock and is melted on its surface from the heat of entering the 
atmosphere. The meteorite probably broke off an asteroid or planetary
body.

       "Its igneous composition reveals that it was chipped off an 
asteroid large enough to undergo some form of volcanic activity," said 
Nick Schneider, associate professor of astrophysical and planetary 
sciences.

       Megan and John Whiteis of Berthoud, and Megan's son, Casper, 
provided the meteorite to aerospace engineering sciences assistant 
professor Scott Palo for scientific analysis after they saw it land in 
their backyard. The couple had just walked out their back door into the 
yard at 1:30 p.m. on Oct. 5, when the meteorite flew over their heads 
and landed about 100 feet ahead of them.

       Megan's mother, Marilyn Meador, contacted the National Center for

Atmospheric Research and spoke with Dr. Maura Hagan who emailed Palo. 
Palo is an expert in radio meteors -- the study of ionized meteor trails

in the upper atmosphere using radio waves. Palo spent the next few days 
putting together a team of scientists interested in helping to analyze 
the specimen. The team includes:

       - Jack Murphy, curator emeritus of the Denver Museum of Nature 
and Science, who is writing a book on Colorado meteorites

       - Chris Peterson, of Cloudbait Observatory, a Colorado fireball 
observation network in Guffey, Colo., who is working to reconstruct the 
trajectory and orbit of the meteorite using infrasound and observations

       - Assistant Professor Stephen Mojzsis of the CU-Boulder 
department of geological sciences

       - Associate Professor Nick Schneider of the CU-Boulder department

of astrophysical and planetary sciences and the Laboratory for 
Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP)

       - Doug Duncan, director of Fiske Planetarium

       The first scientific test will measure gamma rays being emitted 
by the meteorite. It is likely the test will be performed at NASA's 
Johnson Space Center later this week. Because this is a fresh fall, the 
volatile chemical species can be measured. Analysis of the rare gasses 
and gamma ray emissions will provide information about the size and 
history of the meteorite before it entered the Earth's atmosphere.

       Analysis of the meteorite trajectory and orbit also will be 
conducted in an effort to learn where this meteorite originated. Over 
the past 7 years to 10 years, a surprising number of fireballs have been

observed during the first week of October. Scientists have little 
understanding about the source of the fireballs but the Berthoud 
meteorite could provide a wealth of information about these recent 
events. The possibility of tracking a meteorite back to its place of 
origin in the asteroid belt is a rare opportunity. Researchers are 
asking the public to report any fireball sightings in the sky during 
October in order to help determine the meteorite's trajectory and point 
of origin. Fireball sightings can be reported by going to 
www.cloudbait.com.

       Residents of Berthoud also are asked to keep their eyes open for 
any rocks that appear unusual with a smooth, black, shiny crust. People 
who find objects they think may be a meteorite should contact Jack 
Murphy at (000)-000-0000.

       Discoverers Megan and John Whiteis have expressed their keen 
interest in making the Berthoud meteorite available for educational 
purposes. Until needed for scientific analysis, the meteorite will be 
displayed and discussed in CU classrooms and at Fiske Planetarium. CU 
faculty will work with local K-12 educators and the discoverers to bring

the excitement and importance of the Berthoud meteorite to schools and 
museums around the state.

       Viewing times at Fiske will be posted at www.colorado.edu/fiske 
and requests for class visits should be made to Suzanne Traub-Metlay at 
303-492-4073.

       ----

       CONTACTS: Scott Palo, 303-492-4289

       CU-Boulder News Services -- Jim Scott, 303-492-3114, or Carol 
Rowe, 303-492-7426

       METEORITE FACT SHEET

       CU-Boulder, Oct. 11, 2004

       A meteoroid is a small object - generally smaller than the size 
of a pebble - and usually comes from asteroids, the moon, comets or
Mars.

       Thousands of meteorites fall to Earth each year. Meteorites 
generally become visible at about 60 miles from the ground due to the 
intense heating from striking the atmosphere at speeds of at least 
20,000 mph. Only the largest meteors are bright enough to see in the 
daytime sky.

       The average weight of a shooting star, or meteor, in the sky is 
less than one ounce -- about the size of a pea or smaller. Larger 
meteors that hit the ground become meteorites by definition. Most 
meteors decay into dust in the atmosphere and never make contact with 
Earth's surface.

       The largest known meteorite is a 70-ton specimen still embedded 
in the ground in Grootfontein in southwest Africa. The largest meteorite

ever found in the United States is the Willamette meteorite, which was 
found in Oregon and weighs about 15 tons.

       Fireballs are defined as any meteor that is brighter than Venus 
in the night sky. The appearance of a fireball is often followed by a 
sonic boom.

       A meteorite generally is named for the locale, region or town 
where it was found.

       Meteorites generally are classified into three categories: Stony,

iron and stony-iron. Only about 10 per cent of the meteorites that reach

Earth are "iron meteorites." Iron meteorites are rare because they 
typically become buried upon impact. Of the 75 meteorites that have been

recovered in Colorado, 14 are iron.

       Stone meteorites can be divided into chondrite and achondrite 
types. Chondrites contain chondrules, tiny, spherical blobs of silicates

from the earliest solar system formation which pre-date planetary 
formation.

       Achondrite meteorites, like the one recently discovered near 
Berthoud, Colo., make up about 7 percent of all known meteorites. 
Achondrite meteorites are made from chondritic material that was melted 
and re-crystalized while still on or within its parent solar system
body.

       Achondrite meteorites may be pieces of planets and moons ejected 
during impacts or collisions eons ago and may have traveled through the 
solar system for millions of years. The now-famous Allan Hills meteorite

from Mars was discovered in 1998 in Antarctica and continues to be 
controversial since some scientists believe it contains microscopic 
evidence for life.

-end-

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