30 August 2009

Meteor/Meteorite News- 30AUG09

Jupiter rising, ready to shine

Akron Beacon Journal
Q: I heard on the local radio that a meteorite hit a house in Canton during the Perseid meteor shower earlier this month. Is this true, and how big was it? ...

What's Up in September

MaineToday.com
The sky above us and the special events we see periodically, such as meteor showers, comets, northern lights, and eclipses, changed very little in the past ...

Meteorite crater guidebook shows visitors unique features

WQOW TV News 18
Geologists have concluded that a meteorite hit an area in Pierce County millions of years ago. Now, visitors who are interested are able to take a tour of ...

When worlds collide

Observer Online
It's been more stunning than the Perseid meteor shower. It can only truly be described as worlds colliding. Worlds colliding. Epic. ...


Spectacular Bolide over Italy 17JUL09 30AUG09













Photo by Enrico Stomeo, Italy (c) 2009 All Rights Reserved


-11.0 ecliptical fireball at 004630 UT
http://meteore.uai.it/b2009/2009_07_17_0046_stomeo.jpg


Obs: Enrico STOMEO (STOEN)
Loc: Scorze'(VE), Italy, +45.56726 -12.11395 +20 (IMO code 14083)
VideoCamera ccd: MIN38 Ob.3,8 f:0,8 (field 89.2x68.6) + MetRec_41

29 August 2009














ALH 84001 -Photo by NASA

Balmy water once bathed Mars rock claimed to host life
New Scientist Fri, 28 Aug 2009 11:32 AM PDT
Researchers have yet to confirm a controversial claim that a meteorite from Mars boasts fossilised life, but a new study suggests the rock did form in hospitable conditions ....

28 August 2009

France- Meteorite Claimed Found 24AUG09 28AUG09


Une météorite découverte en ville haute ?


L'Aisne Nouvelle vous l'a révélé dans sa précédente édition : dans la nuit de samedi à dimanche, trois personnes dont le président de l'association lilloise, ont constaté depuis l'observatoire astronomique de Lille le passage d'une météorite dans le Nord de la France. A Bohain, un couple a vu dans le ciel « comme une étoile filante bleu vert ».
À Laon, plus exactement rue des Chenizelles, à une trentaine de mètres seulement de l'hôtel de ville, Fabrice Filip a découvert lundi sur sa terrasse un drôle de caillou, aussi lourd qu'une boule de pétanque, de couleur sombre. ...

http://www.aisnenouvelle.fr/index.php/cms/13/article/341987/Une_meteorite_decouverte__en_ville_haute_

Meteor/Meteorite News- Dr. "Lunar" Randy Korotev 28AUG09

















Photo by Dr. Randy Korotev


Rockin' since 1969

Student Life
Aside from studying the Apollo 11 samples, Korotev also spends much of his time analyzing lunar meteorites retrieved from the Middle East, Australia, ...

New Zealand Meteor/Meteorite News- New Zealand Meteor Reported 28AUG09

'Fiery' meteor sighted

By SHAHRA WALSH - The Press
10 comments
Last updated 11:18 28/08/2009

A fiery meteor blazed a trail through the skies this morning, with sightings reported from Christchurch to Rotorua.

Did you see the meteor? Did you take a photograph? Email newstips@stuff.co.nz.


Zoe Battersby was out for an early walk along Jimmy Amers beach in Kaikoura at around 6.10am when she noticed a "very large meteor".

"It was very bright - the size of a streetlight. It looked like it fell into the sea," she said.

Alan Gilmore, resident superintendent of the University of Canterbury Mt John Observatory said meteors enter the atmosphere over New Zealand "several times a year" but he doubted that the rock made it to the ground or water level.

“This meteor is very typical, and often they burn up at about 70kms up. It’s very rare for them to actually land. They are coming into a thicker atmosphere, travelling at 30km a second. The friction is strong and they slow up and start to break up. It’s like throwing a stone at a concrete path,” he said.

Gilmore said as the meteor breaks up, witnesses often see a bright flash known as a 'terminal fireball'.

He said meteors "burning up coming through air - white hot with friction - start to glow". Meteors could be seen from as far as 100kms up and could be seen from almost 1000kms away.

"They are spectacular, often a bright white centre which is the actual rock, - a tiny, brilliant star - with a teardrop-shaped glow that’s brilliant emerald green caused by the oxygen and the radiation coming off the rock," he said.

Gilmore said on the rare occasion that a meteor lands - then becoming known as a meteorite - its arrival is often heralded with a sonic boom caused by the temperature layers that exist closer to the surface, below 60kms.

Because of the range of reported sightings, Gilmore expected the meteor entered the atmosphere somewhere over the North Island.

"The impression of closeness is deceptive. Because they are bright, people think [the meteorite] landed a couple of paddocks away."

http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/2811226/Fiery-meteor-sighted

Submitted by Paolo Gallo, M.V.



Latest Worldwide Meteor/Meteorite News- 28AUG09

Fiery' meteor sighted

Stuff.co.nz
By SHAHRA WALSH - The Press A fiery meteor blazed a trail through the skies this morning, with sightings reported from Christchurch to Rotorua. ...


Meteor lights up NZ sky

Fri, 28 Aug 2009 11:01a.m. If you thought you were experiencing a Close Encounters moment this morning, the bright light in the sky was not aliens - it was a meteor entering the Earth's atmosphere.

Residents of cities as far apart as Rotorua and Christchurch saw the display. ... (more)
0 comments
http://www.3news.co.nz/Meteor-lights-up-NZ-sky/tabid/423/articleID/118695/cat/64/Default.aspx



'Moon rock' in Dutch museum is just petrified wood


AMSTERDAM – It's not green cheese, but it might as well be.

The Dutch national museum said Thursday that one of its prized possessions, a rock supposedly brought back from the moon by U.S. astronauts, is just a piece of petrified wood.

Rijksmuseum spokeswoman Xandra van Gelder, who oversaw the investigation that proved the piece was a fake, said the museum will keep it anyway as a curiosity. ... http://enews.earthlink.net/article/top?guid=20090827/4a9612d0_3426_1335020090827-1890578962




Providence Journal
Block Island surfaces on Mars

Providence Journal
By C. Eugene Emery Jr. The largest meteorite ever found on Mars, discovered by the Mars Rover Opportunity, has been dubbed Block Island. ...



EarthSky: Look for Sporadic Meteors any Clear Evening

Berthoud Recorder
There is so much you can observe in the sky even without a telescope, and of course meteors –– also called shooting stars –– are high on the list. ...

Meteors put on impressive show

NZ City
A witness says she saw a meteor land near South Eyre Rd in North Canterbury at around 6am. She initially thought the bright light was a flare but changed ...


27 August 2009

Italy Meteor/Meteorite News- Photo of Italian Fireball 19July09 27AUG09



















Meteor of July 19, 2009 * big fireball


photo by
Big fireball at 015918 UT, 19JUL09.
This event has was observed in all N-Italy, and in Switzerland and France.
The big flash (-20 ?), which was at half path, covered most
of the meteor, which was 40 degrees long. The begin of the
fireball is left and the end is right. The fireball has been
captured from all three my videocameras. Stomeo

link http://meteore.uai.it


Thank you Stomeo! Great Photo.

AZ Meteorite News- UK Students Receive Meteorites 26AUG09

Ralph Sonny Clary, Meteorite Hunter And Philanthropist, Makes Important Donation To British School ... Sonny Clary is a great example of how one individual ...

Arizona Meteor/Meteorite News- AZ Meteorite Found by Mike Farmer 27AUG09

This meteorite fell on June 23, 2009 at ~11 pm in southern Arizona. A large fireball was seen from the Mexican border to central Arizona. A friend of mine found pieces less than 48 hours after the fall, so I rushed home from Germany to search. After two weeks, I finally found one of the best stones, a 130 gram flight-oriented specimen covered in flow lines. To date we have found a total of 16 stones weighing a total of 2.5 kilograms.

26 August 2009

Meteor/Meteorite News- 26AUG09

30-Pound Meteorite Stolen

Hartford Courant
By CHRISTINE DEMPSEY MONTVILLE — - A meteorite has been reported stolen from the gift shop at The Dinosaur Place on Route 85. Workers at the business, ...

Meteorite reported stolen from Oakdale shop

Norwich Bulletin
Police are seeking a suspect in the theft of a meteorite from Nature's Art at 1650 Route 85 in Oakdale. Owner Roger Phillips said the $2200, 30-pound nickel ...

Great ball of fire

Northumberland Today
If it was a meteorite five miles up, then it was gigantic. I thought at first it was someone's fireworks skyrocket — but there was no sound. ...

30-Pound Meteorite Stolen

Hartford Courant
The meteorite is valued at $2200 and is believed to have been taken Friday or Saturday, said Sgt. Chris Johnson, state police spokesman. ...

Australia Meteor/Meteorite News- Australia Prospective Meteorite Tax 26AUG09

Australia's prospective massive & catastrophic meteorite tax

Australia.TO
This morning I was watching Dr Karl Kruszelnicki as he described the probability of a massive meteorite hitting the earth in the next 50 to 100 years and ...

Meteor/Meteorite News- Alien Visitors and Human Response 26AUG09

09:29 - 8 months ago youtube.com
This is part one of the 1951 science-fiction classic "The Day The Earth Stood Still." ...
youtube.com

(Note: If you wish to view the other parts of the movie please search YouTube.)


For the background behind the plot, please see:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Day_the_Earth_Stood_Still_(1951_film)

25 August 2009

Meteor/Meteorite News- Day of 25AUG09

Perseids, writ large

Discover Magazine
The Earth has left the Perseid meteor stream behind, but last week's display was caught by many a photographer. This video, however, is the best I've seen. ...

Perseid Meteor Shower 2009

Web User
Tomorrow sees the peak of the annual Perseid meteor shower, which will be clearest to UK stargazers just before dawn and from late evening on August 12, ...

Saturn's rings still puzzle scientists

msnbc.com - Jeremy Hsu
... suggests that the rings resulted from the debris of a shattered moon from around 4 billion years ago, during a period of heavy meteorite bombardment. ...

24 August 2009

Sweden Meteorite News- Year of Meteorite Fables-Molly the Dog Strikes a Rock 24AUG09

Kinder Fabel- Molly der Beasthund und Meteoriten
Translated by Thomas Österberg, Sweden
It looks like the dog Hopper now has got a competitor, living in southern Sweden! Her name is Molly.

According to the newspaper Sydsvenska Dagbladet, a meteorite fell down in front of a group of children (and the dog Molly) last week, just outside the small village St.Olof, situated in the Swedish provice of Scania, about 100 km east of Copenhagen.

Heres a link to the article: http://sydsvenskan.se/sverige/article538923/Barn-nara-att-traffas-av-mystisk-flygande-sten.html


I have tried to translate the text content to English.

The children Villmaron Andreas son 9, Linn-Klara Andreas daughter 7, Ebba Larsson 8, and Vinga Andreas daughter 11, were out and went with the family dogs into the grove behind Sankt Olof (in the province of Scania, southernmost Sweden).
They heard a sound, "schwissssss", said Villmaron and shows with his arms how fast the stone damp down, just a few meters in front of them.
"It was like smoke".
When the stone hit the ground, dust and smoke swirled up.
Villmaron first thought it was a branch that had fallen down, but the dog Molly, first got very scared, finally took courage, and sniffed her way to the stone, situated in a hole a few inches down.
It was Molly who found it!
The stone is very black and full of holes. Looks like it was burnt of fire, says Villmaron.
It almost looks like a piece of petrified lava says Villmarons father Andreas Johansson.
The children immediately took the stone with them and run home. They were very excited, says their mother Maja Larsson.
They talked in mouth of each other and told their parents that the rock fell from the sky with a high velocity and how the gravel had whirled up and how scared the dog had been. Then the kids run on to Grandma and Grandpa living in the same village, in order to show them the stone too. When the children had left, their mother Maja started to brood.
"First after a while it went up for me how lucky the children had been. Imagine if anybody of them had been hit by the stone? It could have gone really bad".
The first I found out to do was to call Ystads Allehanda (a local newspaper) says Maja laughing.
Is it really a meteorite? Well the family is convinced that it is! At the official web site of the National Museum of Natural History in Stockholm, we learn that a meteorite will be magnetic.
Maja ties a refrigerator magnet to a sewing thread and holds the magnet next to the stone. The magnet attracts directly to the stone. The shape and colour also corresponds to the description of a meteorite at the National Museum web site. Can it be of any worth wonder Maja tactfully?
But she rapidly concludes that this issue is not important. The stone will be framed and hanged up on the wall, as a memory of an exceptionally event.
First the stone will be sent to the Swedish Museum of Natural History for identification. If it's turns up to is genuine meteorite the story will be even better!

Thomas notes:
The picture of the stone makes me a little bit suspicious. Has some similarities to a piece of slag.
Happy hunting.

LunarMeteorite*Hunter- Thank you Thomas for your kind report!!

Looks like another G Lindfors in Swedish Meteorite History story.
This is at least the third or fourth meteorite fable of the year; Hopper, German School Boy, English Chickens Boy, and now Molly of Sweden.

Colorado Meteorite News- Ode to `Ole John Moore-Johnstown Meteorite 24AUG09

JT Meteorite specimen donated to Parish museum


Posted on Thursday, August 07 @ 00:18:03 CDT
http://www.johnstownbreeze.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=2798

(photo in original article; see link above)

Misty McNally, center, smiles as she looks at a piece of the Johnstown Meteorite owned by Sandy Lebsack, left. Also admiring the space rock is Jack Murphy, right, a former scientist with the Denver Museum of Nature and Science who has spent much of his life studying the 1924 phenomenon. Photo courtesy Clyde Briggs

By Ardis Briggs
The Johnstown Breeze

JOHNSTOWN – A piece of the Johnstown Meteorite has again landed in Johnstown.

A small part of the rock from space that fell July 6, 1924, was presented to the Johnstown Historical Society Tuesday night by its owner, Misty McNally.

McNally, a former Johnstown resident who now lives in Kansas City, had the fragment of the meteorite sent to town via the postal service. She marked the package “fragile” and so ensured the meteorite’s second landing was softer than the first.

The 1924 landing startled folks from Johnstown to Mead, as pieces large and small rained upon the area that Sunday afternoon. Small fragments hit roofs like hail, but it was one large chunk that made history. It landed by the entrance of the local cemetery and interrupted the funeral of John Moore. Startled funeral go-ers grabbed the shovel intended to fill in Moore’s grave and ran to unearth the smoldering piece which smashed nearby.

The fact the fall was witnessed by so many and the pieces recovered immediately is a rarity even now. But it was considered as amazing then, and tiny Johnstown became famous overnight. The meteorite itself is a rare type, an igneous cement-looking rock which has fooled seekers for years.

Jack Murphy, an expert on meteorites who retired a few years ago after 35 years at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science, told the story of the meteorite Tuesday night. He also told several people who brought pieces of what they hoped were the meteorite they did not have a part of the celebrity rock.

One who did, however, told her meteorite story.

Sandy Wiest Lebsack showed her piece, nicknamed “Chip,” to the group and told how her grandfather, Peter Wiest, kept it for years and passed it to her. That has been the only local documented fragment in this area of the 28 confirmed pieces recovered, said Murphy. The largest piece was sold after its fall to the Denver museum and then to the American Museum in New York, where it is still. But now McNally's gift to the museum can be added to the list of documented fragments and a piece of local history has again come home.

Murphy had a gift for the museum too. He presented a copy of the front page of the Denver Post in July 1924 with the picture of a little girl and recovered pieces of the Johnstown meteorite. That little girl, “little Miss Beth Bailey,” as the article states, is Murphy’s mother. Her father worked at the museum, and she was there when the specimens were brought out to show the press. Therefore, she was added to the photo with the space rocks; rocks her son has spent years researching.

The piece of the meteorite and the front-page picture will be added to the display at the museum telling about Johnstown’s visitor from space.

Editor’s note: According to a story published about a year ago in The Johnstown Breeze, it was reported a 29th piece of the Johnstown Meteorite had been found by a Johnstown resident. After the story was published, the sample was examined by Murphy, who has said he does not believe it is a piece of the meteorite.

Impact News- Martian Impact Skid Mark Images 24AUG09

Slope Streaks on Mars - Featured images for August 2009

Whole story with images:
http://www.psi.edu/pgwg/images/aug09image.html


"Several of the streaks are triggered by impact craters
that have dark ejecta."

"Other interesting observations include triggering of
slope streaks by an impact crater, blast from an impact
explosion, or boulders rolling or bouncing downslope,
and formation of long linear ridges within the streak
that are parallel to its margins."

Source: Paul H., Baton Rouge, LA, USA

Meteorite News- Michael Farmer Meteorite Hunter 24AUG09

Bensour, Morocco
(LL6)
March 2002

Thuathe, Lesotho
(H4)
February 2003

New Orleans, Louisiana
(H5)
Sept 2003

Moss, Norway
(CO3.6)
July, 2006

Muonionalusta, Sweden
(Iron)
July and August, 2006/2007

Cali, Colombia
(H/L4)
July, 2007

Puerto Lápice, Spain
(Eucrite)
September, 2007

Carancas, Peru
(H4) Crater-forming impact
September, 2007

Berduc, Argentina
(L6)
April, 2008

Ash Creek Texas
(H5)
February 15, 2009

Meteor/Meteorite News- Amino Acids from Comets 24AUG09


NASA/JPL

Fetched from a faraway comet, distinctive amino acids

Philadelphia Inquirer
Amino acids have also turned up in meteorites - and reportedly lent a distinctive smell to pieces of the famous Murchison meteorite, which fell on Australia ...

Meteorite News- Jumping Asteroids 24AUG09

Jumping Asteroids
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/features.cfm?feature=2286


Jumping Asteroids
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
August 18, 2009

How our solar system was formed has fascinated scientists and laymen
alike for -- well, for a really, really long time. New research may have
answered a piece to the puzzle - how big were the first planetesimals?

For those of you scoring at home," planetesimals" were the first solid
objects in our newly minted solar system (also known as the
protoplanetary disk). They began life as small grains of dust orbiting
an infant sun. These grains would bump into each other, clump together
and gradually form larger grains of dust, which eventually became small
space rocks.

Now the theory goes that some of these small rock-sized planetesimals
aspired for greater things, and continued to gradually grow in size to
become asteroids, and that a few of those continued to grow beyond the
asteroid stage and become planets.

The problem with this tidy little theory is that when the burgeoning
space rocks grew to about one meter (3.3 feet) in size, orbital
mechanics tells us the gas comingling with them in the protoplanetary
disk should have acted like a brake, slowing their velocity appreciably.
Their orbital speed having been cut, these filing cabinet-sized space
rocks would have spiraled into the sun. Essentially, the gas would have
acted as a celestial "mini-vacuum." The problem is, there are asteroids
up there in space. Honest, ask any astronomer. So what happened?

Evidence is now mounting that these small space rocks quickly "jumped"
(or grew) in size from below one meter to multi-kilometer in size.
Planetesimals that big were big enough to plow through the drag created
by the gas in the protoplanetary disk without having their orbits
appreciably altered. Hence they did not spiral into the sun.

What data point to a jump in asteroid sizes? Simply, the asteroids
available for viewing in the night's sky. Telescopic surveys indicate
there is currently a plethora of asteroids less than one kilometer (.62
mile) wide but those over one kilometer drop considerably in number. The
authors used computer simulations in an attempt to mimic the impacts and
coagulation processes that took place over the millions of years between
when the asteroids formed and now. The only way they could arrive at the
current asteroid size distribution was to begin these simulations with
planetesimals that quickly morphed into asteroids hundreds of kilometers
in size. Once their growth spurt was over, these massive celestial
bodies began an epoch-sized game of demolition derby as they orbited the
sun. Over the eons, and with each extraterrestrial pileup, came fewer
and fewer large asteroids - a fragmentation process that continues to
this day. Despite the modest sizes of asteroids today, the paper's
authors conclude that asteroids must have been born big.

The paper, "Asteroids Were Born Big" is available now online from the
ScienceDirect website and will be available in a future edition of the
journal Icarus.

For more information about asteroids and other near-Earth objects please
visit: www.jpl.nasa.gov/asteroidwatch .