[meteorite-list] Oddball 'Crystal' Survived Crash to Earth Inside Meteorite

Graham Ensor graham.ensor at gmail.com
Wed Mar 18 19:28:23 EDT 2015


Can't see their logic that they are unlikely to survive because the
meteorites "heat up inside"....we all know that they don't?

Graham

On Wed, Mar 18, 2015 at 10:13 PM, Shawn Alan via Meteorite-list
<meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com> wrote:
> Hello Listers
>
> Let hope some fossils will survive from Mars :)
>
> Enjoy!
>
> Shawn Alan
> IMCA 1633
> ebay store http://www.ebay.com/sch/imca1633ny/m.html
> Website http://meteoritefalls.com
>
> Oddball 'Crystal' Survived Crash to Earth Inside Meteorite
> by Elizabeth Howell, Live Science Contributor   |   March 18, 2015
> 07:53am ET
>
> A bizarre crystal-like mineral recently found in a meteorite that
> crashed to Earth perhaps 15,000 years ago adds more support for the idea
> that the fragile structure can survive in nature. But how it formed at
> the beginnings of the solar system is still a mystery.
>
> The newfound mineral is called a "quasicrystal" because it resembles a
> crystal, but the atoms are not arranged as regularly as they are in real
> crystals. The quasicrystal hitched a ride to Earth on a meteorite that
> zipped from space through Earth's atmosphere and crashed to the ground.
> That process is generally a violent one that heats up the insides of
> rocks, making the delicate quasicrystal's survival a surprise.
>
> "The difference between crystals and quasicrystals can be visualized by
> imagining a tiled floor," said according to a statement by Princeton
> University in a press release. "Tiles that are six-sided hexagons can
> fit neatly against each other to cover the entire floor. But five-sided
> pentagons or 10-sided decagons laid next to each will result in gaps
> between tiles."
>
> Source:
> http://www.livescience.com/50167-quasicrystal-survived-meteorite-crash.html
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