Tag Archives: minerals

NASA’s modified U-2 spy plane is hunting for ‘strategic minerals’ in the desert. Here’s why – Space.com

  1. NASA’s modified U-2 spy plane is hunting for ‘strategic minerals’ in the desert. Here’s why Space.com
  2. USGS provides $2 million to states to identify critical mineral potential in mine waste – MINING.COM MINING.com
  3. Media Alert: Low-Level Helicopter Flights to Image Geology in Western Nevada | U.S. Geological Survey United States Geological Survey (.gov)
  4. NASA Maps Minerals and Ecosystem Function in Southwest U.S. Regions NASA
  5. USGS provides $2 million to states to identify critical mineral potential in mine waste | U.S. Geological Survey United States Geological Survey (.gov)
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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India’s Modi urges nations with critical minerals to see custodianship as ‘global responsibility’ – Yahoo News

  1. India’s Modi urges nations with critical minerals to see custodianship as ‘global responsibility’ Yahoo News
  2. Imbalance in supply of critical minerals, rare earths to promote new form of colonialism, warns PM Modi The Tribune India
  3. PM Modi warns of new colonialism model over control of rare earth minerals Hindustan Times
  4. PM Modi warns of new colonialism model over control of critical minerals | Mint Mint
  5. B20 Summit India: PM Modi Warns Against Protectionism Of Critical Materials; Calls It ‘New Colonialism’ BQ Prime
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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New results reveal surprising behavior of minerals deep in the Earth

Boudinage in brecciated dolostone rocks of the Panamint Range (Wildrose Area, Death Valley National Park). New research shows that periclase is stronger than bridgmanite in earth’s lower mantle, analogous to boudins developing in rigid (“stronger”) rocks among less competent (“weaker”) rocks. Credit: Jennifer M. Jackson, Caltech

As you are reading this, more than 400 miles below you is a massive world of extreme temperatures and pressures that has been churning and evolving for longer than humans have been on the planet. Now, a detailed new model from Caltech researchers illustrates the surprising behavior of minerals deep in the planet’s interior over millions of years and shows that the processes are actually happening in a manner completely opposite to what had been previously theorized.

The research was conducted by an international team of scientists, including Jennifer M. Jackson, William E. Leonhard Professor of Mineral Physics. A paper describing the study appears in the journal Nature on January 11.

“Despite the enormous size of the planet, the deeper parts are often overlooked because they’re literally out of reach—we can’t sample them,” Jackson says. “Additionally, these processes are so slow they seem imperceptible to us. But the flow in the lower mantle communicates with everything it touches; it’s a deep engine that affects plate tectonics and may control volcanic activity.”

The lower mantle of the planet is solid rock, but over hundreds of millions of years it slowly oozes, like a thick caramel, carrying heat throughout the planet’s interior in a process called convection.

Many questions remain unanswered about the mechanisms that allow this convection to happen. The extreme temperatures and pressures at the lower mantle—up to 135 gigapascals and thousands of degrees Fahrenheit—make it difficult to simulate in the laboratory.

For reference, the pressure at the lower mantle is almost a thousand times the pressure at the deepest point of the ocean. Thus, while many lab experiments on mineral physics have provided hypotheses about the behavior of lower mantle rocks, the processes occurring at geologic timescales to drive the sluggish flow of lower-mantle convection have been uncertain.

The lower mantle is mostly made up of a magnesium silicate called bridgmanite yet also includes a small but significant amount of a magnesium oxide called periclase mixed in among the bridgmanite in addition to small amounts of other minerals. Laboratory experiments had previously shown that periclase is weaker than bridgmanite and deforms more easily, but these experiments did not take into account how minerals behave on a timescale of millions of years. When incorporating these timescales into a complex computational model, Jackson and colleagues found that grains of periclase are actually stronger than the bridgmanite surrounding them.

“We can use the analogy of boudinage in the rock record [image at right], where boudins, which is French for sausage, develop in a rigid, ‘stronger,’ rock layer among less competent, ‘weaker,’ rock,” Jackson says.

“As another analogy, think about chunky peanut butter,” Jackson explains. “We had thought for decades that periclase was the ‘oil’ in peanut butter, and acted as the lubricant between the harder grains of bridgmanite. Based on this new study, it turns out that periclase grains act as the ‘nuts’ in chunky peanut butter. Periclase grains just go with the flow but don’t affect the viscous behavior, except in circumstances when the grains are strongly concentrated. We show that under pressure, mobility is much slower in periclase compared to bridgmanite. There is an inversion of behavior: periclase hardly deforms, while the major phase, bridgmanite, controls deformation in Earth’s deep mantle.”

Understanding these extreme processes happening far below our feet is important for creating accurate four-dimensional simulations of our planet, and it helps us comprehend more about other planets as well. Thousands of exoplanets (planets outside of our solar system) have now been confirmed, and discovering more about mineral physics under extreme conditions gives new insights into the evolution of planets radically different from our own.

More information:
Patrick Cordier et al, Periclase deforms more slowly than bridgmanite under mantle conditions, Nature (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-05410-9

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New results reveal surprising behavior of minerals deep in the Earth (2023, January 12)
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GUY ADAMS: Is China planning to colonise the Moon to snatch minerals to dominate Earth? 

Last year, many cinema-goers in China would have seen a hit movie called Moon Man. Starring Shen Teng, a famous actor best described as the Chinese equivalent of Hollywood’s Will Ferrell, it revolves around Dugu Yue, a lonely maintenance worker stranded in a lunar research facility after an asteroid hits planet Earth.

His slapstick exploits lifted the spirits of a locked-down nation, helping Moon Man become the second-highest grossing movie of the year. Taking 3.1 billion Yuan (£380 million) so far, it’s already one of the most successful Chinese-language comedy films of all time.

That’s no mean feat given the impact of Beijing’s draconian covid restrictions on box-office takings.

Yet China’s burgeoning fascination with lunar exploration goes beyond mere fiction. For the prospects of the communist superpower creating a real-life version of Dugu Yue has just sparked a major diplomatic row.

The Artemis I unmanned lunar rocket lifts off from launch pad 39B at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, in November

Astronaut Wang Yaping waves after disembarking from the return capsule at the Dongfeng landing site in April

At its centre is Bill Nelson, the top official of U.S. space agency NASA, who this week used an interview to make the explosive suggestion that Beijing intends to colonise the Moon and lay claim to its mineral wealth.

‘It’s a fact: we’re in a space race,’ he told Politico, a U.S. website journal that reports on global political and policy news. ‘We better watch out that they don’t get to a place on the Moon under the guise of scientific research. And it is not beyond the realm of possibility that they then say, “Keep out, we’re here, this is our territory.” ’

Nelson suggested that the People’s Republic, or rather its vast military, is now planning to effectively take over the Moon via similar tactics to the ones it has recently used in the South China Sea, where troops have established bases on a number of contested islands.

His fears were echoed by retired astronaut Terry Virts, a former commander of the International Space Station. ‘They want to be the dominant power on Earth, so going to the Moon is a way to show their system is working,’ he warned. ‘There is potentially mischief China can do on the Moon. If they set up infrastructure there, they could potentially deny communications, for example. Having them there doesn’t make things easier. There is real concern about Chinese meddling.’

Behind these pronouncements lies a major concern. Namely: the lunar surface contains large reserves of valuable metals, from iron and gold to platinum, tungsten, and a gas called helium-3, which some scientists believe could one day be used to fuel nuclear fusion plants.

Three crew members of China’s Shenzhou XIII mission returned to Earth safely in April after completing six-month space mission

If a way could be found to transport significant quantities across the 240,000 miles of space between Earth and the Moon, some reckon the Moon’s supplies of helium-3 may solve mankind’s future energy crisis. A single 40-ton consignment could, by the reckoning of some experts, power the U.S. for an entire year, and the Moon is thought to have 1.1 million tons of it.

A country able to plant its flag on the Moon could, in other words, place itself on course to future world domination.

That helps explain why, after decades of indifference, serious efforts are once more being made to send a human being back to the Moon, with the U.S. desperate to get there before its communist rival.

It’s more than 50 years since Apollo 17’s swashbuckling pilot Gene Cernan uttered the last words that a human being would speak on the Moon in the 20th century, when he turned to colleague Harrison ‘Jack’ Schmitt and declared: ‘Okay, Jack, let’s get this mother outta here.’

NASA is hoping to make a return visit by the end of 2025. Shortly before Christmas, its Artemis I mission saw an un-crewed Orion space capsule fly around the Moon. A follow-up, Artemis II, is scheduled to take a crew on a similar journey next year. If all goes according to plan, Artemis III aims to place an American on the Moon by 2025, using a lander developed by Elon Musk’s spacecraft manufacturer, SpaceX.

The Shenzhou-13 spacecraft is launched from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center

China has for its part opened a new space station called Tiangong, and officials says they want to land ‘taikonauts’ (their version of astronauts) on the Moon by 2030.

Recent years have seen Beijing launch a series of robotic landers and rovers to collect lunar samples. In 2020, its Chang’e 5 spacecraft returned home with a collection of exotic rock fragments, the first time since the Soviet Union’s Luna mission in 1976.

A Chang’e 6 robotic mission aims to soon collect further samples, while Chang’e 7 and 8 will make preparations for a scientific base at the Moon’s south pole.

In a lecture this week, Wu Yansheng, chairman of China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation hinted at the communist administration’s long-term plan by showing animated film of an astronaut with a People’s Republic flag descending from a lander onto the lunar surface. A second clip depicted a pair of astronauts, a planted flag and a rover.

While exploration of the Moon is entirely legal, international law (on paper) currently prohibits any person or country from attempting to turn it into their property.

The rules governing its future are set out in the UN’s Outer Space Treaty of 1967, which bars nations from making territorial claims on any celestial body. Both China and the US are among the 102 countries who signed it.

What nobody knows, however, is how such a law might fare in court, since the treaty has never been properly tested. ‘International law in outer space is not as well developed as it should be,’ is how Ian Crawford, a planetary scientist at Birkbeck College, London, puts it.

Similar grey areas in international law have led to some friction on planet Earth between competing powers seeking to develop and secure ownership of both the Arctic and Antarctic.

With this in mind, Victoria Samson, Washington office director of the Secure World Foundation, which is dedicated to the peaceful use of outer space, admits that competition between Washington and Beijing for ‘limited landing sites and resources’ on the lunar surface could create friction. ‘That’s where we have made the argument that there is a need to engage with China,’ she told Politico this week, ‘because of the possibility of landing near each other or having to provide emergency services to astronauts or taikonauts’.

Other experts are less convinced that any intergalactic conflict is imminent.

‘There is obviously some kind of rivalry between the U.S. and China, and it would be naive to think this doesn’t intrude into space,’ says Dr Robert Massey of the Royal Astronomical Society. ‘Space has already been militarised, with spy satellites being a good example. But the Moon is a huge place and it’s very difficult to see how astronauts would need or be able to mount a land grab.’

Dr Massey adds that, although there are valuable metals on the lunar surface, we are nowhere near being able to mine them. And the potential uses of helium-3 have yet to be properly proven.

‘Yes, China may want to assert itself as a global space power and push boundaries, but that is quite different to some sort of colonial dispute. It’s perhaps more similar to the sort of space race we saw between the U.S. and USSR during the Cold War.’

Be that as it may, China has been incensed by Bill Nelson’s comments, responding via a barrage of critical articles in its State-sponsored media outlets, several of which (perhaps fairly) accuse the NASA chief of fear-mongering in order to persuade the U.S. Congress to sign off his organisation’s $24 billion annual budget.

The People’s Daily for example declared: ‘In terms of Moon landing, it is our business to decide when we will send our astronauts there, and it is none of any other’s country’s business’. Meanwhile, the country’s Global Times newspaper told readers that Nelson’s ‘smearing remarks against China’s space development are yet another ridiculous and pathetic attempt to hype the “China threat” theory to get more funding, which only exposes the U.S.’s own hegemonic and colonial ambitions’.

Song Zhongping, a space analyst and TV commentator loyal to Beijing, has meanwhile launched a furious attack on NASA’s boss in the Global Times, saying: ‘Being a former astronaut himself, it is pathetic that he would play the trick of a thief crying “Stop thief”.’

With fighting talk like that, Moon Man won’t be the only lunar drama that captures China’s imagination in the months and years to come.

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A 15-metric ton meteorite crashed in Africa. Now 2 new minerals have been found in it

CNN — Scientists have identified two minerals never before seen on Earth in a meteorite weighing 15.2 metric tons (33,510 pounds).

The minerals came from a 70-gram (nearly 2.5-ounce) slice of the meteorite, which was discovered in Somalia in 2020 and is the ninth-largest meteorite ever found, according to a news release from the University of Alberta.

Chris Herd, curator of the university’s meteorite collection, received samples of the space rock so he could classify it. As he was examining it, something unusual caught his eye — some parts of the sample weren’t identifiable by a microscope. He then sought advice from Andrew Locock, head of the university’s Electron Microprobe Laboratory, since Locock has experience describing new minerals.

“The very first day he did some analyses, he said, ‘You’ve got at least two new minerals in there,'” Herd, a professor in the university’s department of Earth and atmospheric sciences, said in a statement. “That was phenomenal. Most of the time it takes a lot more work than that to say there’s a new mineral.”

One mineral’s name — elaliite — derives from the space object itself, which is called the “El Ali” meteorite since it was found near the town of El Ali in central Somalia.

Herd named the second one elkinstantonite after Lindy Elkins-Tanton, vice president of Arizona State University’s Interplanetary Initiative. Elkins-Tanton is also a regents professor in that university’s School of Earth and Space Exploration and the principal investigator of NASA’s upcoming Psyche mission — a journey to a metal-rich asteroid orbiting the sun between Mars and Jupiter, according to the space agency.

“Lindy has done a lot of work on how the cores of planets form, how these iron nickel cores form, and the closest analogue we have are iron meteorites,” Herd said. “It made sense to name a mineral after her and recognize her contributions to science.”

The International Mineralogical Association’s approval of the two new minerals in November of this year “indicates that the work is robust,” said Oliver Tschauner, a mineralogist and professor of research in the department of geoscience at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.

“Whenever you find a new mineral, it means that the actual geological conditions, the chemistry of the rock, was different than what’s been found before,” Herd said. “That’s what makes this exciting: In this particular meteorite you have two officially described minerals that are new to science.”

The role of lab-created minerals in discovery

Locock’s quick identification was possible because similar minerals had been synthetically created before, and he was able to match the composition of the newly discovered minerals with their human-made counterparts, according to the University of Alberta release.

“Material scientists do this all the time,” said Alan Rubin, a meteorite researcher and former adjunct professor and research geochemist in the department of earth, planetary and space sciences at the University of California, Los Angeles. “They can create new compounds — one, just to see what’s physically possible just as a research interest, and others … will say, ‘We’re seeking a compound that has certain properties for some practical or commercial application, like conductivity or high strain or high melting temperature.

“It’s just fortuitous that a researcher will find a mineral in a meteorite or a terrestrial rock that hasn’t been known before, and then very often, that same compound will have been created previously by material scientists.”

Both new minerals are phosphates of iron, Tschauner said. A phosphate is a salt or ester of a phosphoric acid.

“Phosphates in iron meteorites are secondary products: They form through oxidation of phosphides … which are rare primary components of iron meteorites,” he said via email. “Hence, the two new phosphates tell us about oxidation processes that occurred in the meteorite material. It remains to be seen if the oxidation occurred in space or on Earth, after the fall, but as far as I know, many of these meteorite phosphates formed in space. In either case, water is probably the reactant that caused the oxidation.”

The findings were presented in November at the University of Alberta’s Space Exploration Symposium. The revelations “broaden our perspective on the natural materials that can be found and can be formed in the solar system,” Rubin said.

The El Ali meteorite the minerals came from appears to have been sent to China in search of a buyer, Herd said.

Meanwhile, the researchers are still analyzing the minerals — and potentially a third one — to find out what the conditions were in the meteorite when the space rock formed. And newly discovered minerals could have exciting implications for the future, he added.

“Whenever there’s a new material that’s known, material scientists are interested too because of the potential uses in a wide range of things in society,” Herd said.

The-CNN-Wire™ & © 2022 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

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2 never-before-seen minerals found in huge asteroid that fell to Earth

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CNN
 — 

Scientists have identified two minerals never before seen on Earth in a meteorite weighing 15.2 metric tons (33,510 pounds).

The minerals came from a 70-gram (nearly 2.5-ounce) slice of the meteorite, which was discovered in Somalia in 2020 and is the ninth-largest meteorite ever found, according to a news release from the University of Alberta.

Chris Herd, curator of the university’s meteorite collection, received samples of the space rock so he could classify it. As he was examining it, something unusual caught his eye — some parts of the sample weren’t identifiable by a microscope. He then sought advice from Andrew Locock, head of the university’s Electron Microprobe Laboratory, since Locock has experience describing new minerals.

“The very first day he did some analyses, he said, ‘You’ve got at least two new minerals in there,’” Herd, a professor in the university’s department of Earth and atmospheric sciences, said in a statement. “That was phenomenal. Most of the time it takes a lot more work than that to say there’s a new mineral.”

One mineral’s name — elaliite — derives from the space object itself, which is called the “El Ali” meteorite since it was found near the town of El Ali in central Somalia.

Herd named the second one elkinstantonite after Lindy Elkins-Tanton, vice president of Arizona State University’s Interplanetary Initiative. Elkins-Tanton is also a regents professor in that university’s School of Earth and Space Exploration and the principal investigator of NASA’s upcoming Psyche mission — a journey to a metal-rich asteroid orbiting the sun between Mars and Jupiter, according to the space agency.

“Lindy has done a lot of work on how the cores of planets form, how these iron nickel cores form, and the closest analogue we have are iron meteorites,” Herd said. “It made sense to name a mineral after her and recognize her contributions to science.”

The International Mineralogical Association’s approval of the two new minerals in November of this year “indicates that the work is robust,” said Oliver Tschauner, a mineralogist and professor of research in the department of geoscience at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.

“Whenever you find a new mineral, it means that the actual geological conditions, the chemistry of the rock, was different than what’s been found before,” Herd said. “That’s what makes this exciting: In this particular meteorite you have two officially described minerals that are new to science.”

Locock’s quick identification was possible because similar minerals had been synthetically created before, and he was able to match the composition of the newly discovered minerals with their human-made counterparts, according to the University of Alberta release.

“Material scientists do this all the time,” said Alan Rubin, a meteorite researcher and former adjunct professor and research geochemist in the department of earth, planetary and space sciences at the University of California, Los Angeles. “They can create new compounds — one, just to see what’s physically possible just as a research interest, and others … will say, ‘We’re seeking a compound that has certain properties for some practical or commercial application, like conductivity or high strain or high melting temperature.

“It’s just fortuitous that a researcher will find a mineral in a meteorite or a terrestrial rock that hasn’t been known before, and then very often, that same compound will have been created previously by material scientists.”

Both new minerals are phosphates of iron, Tschauner said. A phosphate is a salt or ester of a phosphoric acid.

“Phosphates in iron meteorites are secondary products: They form through oxidation of phosphides … which are rare primary components of iron meteorites,” he said via email. “Hence, the two new phosphates tell us about oxidation processes that occurred in the meteorite material. It remains to be seen if the oxidation occurred in space or on Earth, after the fall, but as far as I know, many of these meteorite phosphates formed in space. In either case, water is probably the reactant that caused the oxidation.”

The findings were presented in November at the University of Alberta’s Space Exploration Symposium. The revelations “broaden our perspective on the natural materials that can be found and can be formed in the solar system,” Rubin said.

The El Ali meteorite the minerals came from appears to have been sent to China in search of a buyer, Herd said.

Meanwhile, the researchers are still analyzing the minerals — and potentially a third one — to find out what the conditions were in the meteorite when the space rock formed. And newly discovered minerals could have exciting implications for the future, he added.

“Whenever there’s a new material that’s known, material scientists are interested too because of the potential uses in a wide range of things in society,” Herd said.

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Scientists Find Two Completely New Minerals On Meteorite

  • Univeristy of Alberta researchers have discovered two completely new minerals that have never been found on earth. 
  • The two minerals named elkinstantonite and elaliite were found on a meteor in east Africa.
  • Western researchers called the space rock “El Ali” because it was discovered near the town of El Ali, in the Hiiraan region of Somalia.

A team of researchers from the University of Alberta discovered at least two new minerals never before seen on Earth in a 15-ton meteorite that landed in east Africa.

Unearthed in Somalia in 2020, the meteorite is the ninth largest ever found. When researchers sliced off a two-ounce section of the space rock, they found two new minerals named “elaliite” and “elkinstantonite.” Details about the minerals remain limited. 

“Whenever you find a new mineral, it means that the actual geological conditions, the chemistry of the rock, was different than what’s been found before.

“That’s what makes this exciting: In this particular meteorite you have two officially described minerals that are new to science,” Chris Herd, a professor in the Department of Earth & Atmospheric Sciences and curator of the University of Alberta’s Meteorite Collection, said in a press release. 

Western researchers called the space rock “El Ali” because it was discovered near the town of El Ali, in the Hiiraan region of Somalia. 

Herd said the two new minerals were discovered on the first day the sample was analyzed. He said, “most of the time, it takes a lot more work than that to say there’s a new mineral.” 

Similar minerals had been synthetically created in a lab by French researchers in the 1980s but never found in nature. 

Herd also said these new mineral discoveries could one day benefit humanity: 

“Whenever there’s a new material that’s known, material scientists are interested too because of the potential uses in a wide range of things in society.”

Reports show the space rock has been shipped to China as meteorites are often bought and sold on international markets. 

By Zerohedge.com

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Massive Meteorite Hid Two Minerals Never Before Seen on Earth

A giant meteorite discovered in Somalia turned out to be full of surprises. The El Ali meteorite is named for its landing location near the town of El Ali. It weighs 16.5 tons (15 tonnes) and is one of the largest meteorites ever found. Scientists researching its composition discovered it was hiding two new minerals never before seen on Earth.

A research team at the University of Alberta in Canada discovered the minerals while examining a small 2.5-ounce (70 gram) slice of the space rock. The new minerals are named elaliite (for the meteorite’s nearby town) and elkinstantonite in honor of Lindy Elkins-Tanton, the principal investigator for NASA’s upcoming Psyche asteroid mission.

“Whenever you find a new mineral, it means that the actual geological conditions, the chemistry of the rock, was different than what’s been found before,” said geologist Chris Herd, curator of the University of Alberta’s Meteorite Collection, in a statement on Monday. “That’s what makes this exciting: In this particular meteorite you have two officially described minerals that are new to science.” 

Herd brought in mineralogist Andew Locock to help analyze the meteorite, which has now been classified as a type of iron meteorite. Locock quickly identified the new minerals by comparing them with similar minerals researchers had synthetically created in lab settings. 

“That was phenomenal,” Herd said. “Most of the time it takes a lot more work than that to say there’s a new mineral.” 

Herd presented the team’s findings at the Space Exploration Symposium at the university earlier this month. The next step in the research will be to see what the minerals can tell the scientists about the formation of the meteorite.

While the El Ali meteorite has only recently come to the attention of the science community, it was reportedly known to locals in Somalia who traced its origin back by at least five generations. Only a small part of the meteorite has been extracted for study. According to Herd, the research team heard the main meteorite was moved to China, where it may be up for sale.

Scientists still hope to get their hands on more of the meteorite. They have already identified a possible third new mineral, and there could be more surprises hiding out in the fallen space rock. The new minerals could be of interest beyond geology and astronomy. “Whenever there’s a new material that’s known,” Herd said, “material scientists are interested too because of the potential uses in a wide range of things in society.”

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Two Minerals – Never Before Seen on Earth – Discovered in Massive Meteorite

A slice of the El Ali meteorite, now housed in the University of Alberta’s Meteorite Collection, contains two minerals never before seen on Earth. Credit: University of Alberta

New minerals discovered in massive meteorite may reveal clues to asteroid formation.

At least two new minerals that have never before been seen on Earth have been discovered by a team of researchers in a 33,000-pound (15,000-kg) meteorite found in Somalia in 2020. This giant meteorite is the ninth largest ever found.

“Whenever you find a new mineral, it means that the actual geological conditions, the chemistry of the rock, was different than what’s been found before,” says Chris Herd, a professor in the Department of Earth & Atmospheric Sciences and curator of the University of Alberta’s Meteorite Collection. “That’s what makes this exciting: In this particular meteorite you have two officially described minerals that are new to science.”

A single 70-gram slice of the meteorite was sent to the University of Alberta for classification, where the two minerals were discovered. There already appears to be a potential third mineral under consideration. Herd notes that if researchers were to obtain more samples from the massive meteorite, there’s a chance that even more minerals might be found.

The two newly discovered minerals have been named elaliite and elkinstantonite. The first name, elaliite, comes from the meteorite itself, which is officially called the “El Ali” meteorite because it was found near the town of El Ali, in the Hiiraan region of Somalia. Herd named the second mineral elkinstantonite after Lindy Elkins-Tanton, vice president of the ASU Interplanetary Initiative, professor at Arizona State University’s School of Earth and Space Exploration, and principal investigator of

A slice of the El Ali meteorite contains two minerals never before seen on Earth. Credit: University of Alberta

“Lindy has done a lot of work on how the cores of planets form, how these iron-nickel cores form, and the closest analogue we have are iron meteorites. So it made sense to name a mineral after her and recognize her contributions to science,” Herd explains.

In collaboration with researchers at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) and the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), Herd classified the El Ali meteorite as an “Iron, IAB complex” meteorite, one of over 350 in that particular category.

As Herd was analyzing the meteorite to classify it, he saw something that caught his attention. He brought in the expertise of Andrew Locock, head of the University of Alberta’s Electron Microprobe Laboratory, who has been involved in other new mineral descriptions including Heamanite-(Ce).

“The very first day he did some analyses, he said, ‘You’ve got at least two new minerals in there,’” says Herd. “That was phenomenal. Most of the time it takes a lot more work than that to say there’s a new mineral.”

Locock’s rapid identification was possible because the two minerals had been synthetically created before, so he was able to match the composition of the newly discovered natural minerals with their human-made counterparts.

Scientists are still examining the minerals in detail to determine what they can tell us about the conditions in the meteorite when it formed.

“That’s my expertise — how you tease out the geologic processes and the geologic history of the asteroid this rock was once part of,” says Herd. “I never thought I’d be involved in describing brand new minerals just by virtue of working on a meteorite.”

Herd also notes that any new mineral discoveries could possibly yield exciting new uses down the line.

“Whenever there’s a new material that’s known, material scientists are interested too because of the potential uses in a wide range of things in society.”

While the future of the meteorite remains uncertain, Herd says the researchers have received news that it appears to have been moved to China in search of a potential buyer. It remains to be seen whether additional samples will be available for scientific purposes.

Herd described the findings at the Space Exploration Symposium on November 21 at the University of Alberta’s ETLC Solarium.



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Two minerals never before been seen on Earth found inside 17-ton meteorite

Two minerals that have never been seen before on Earth have been discovered inside a massive meteorite in Somalia. They could hold important clues to how asteroids form.

The two brand new minerals were found inside a single 2.5 ounce (70 gram) slice taken from the 16.5 ton (15 metric tons) El Ali meteorite, which crashed to Earth in 2020. Scientists named the minerals elaliite after the meteor and elkinstantonite after Lindy Elkins-Tanton (opens in new tab), the managing director of the Arizona State University Interplanetary Initiative and principal investigator of NASA’s upcoming Psyche mission, which will send a probe to investigate the mineral-rich Psyche asteroid for evidence of how our solar system‘s planets formed.

“Whenever you find a new mineral, it means that the actual geological conditions, the chemistry of the rock, was different than what’s been found before,” Chris Herd (opens in new tab), a professor in the Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences at the University of Alberta, said in a statement (opens in new tab). “That’s what makes this exciting: In this particular meteorite you have two officially described minerals that are new to science.” 

Related: Miners just discovered the largest pink diamond in more than 300 years

The researchers classified El Ali as an Iron IAB complex meteorite, a type made of meteoric iron flecked with tiny chunks of silicates. While investigating the meteorite slice, details of the new minerals caught the scientists’ attention. By comparing the minerals with versions of them that had been previously synthesized in a lab, they were able to rapidly identify them as newly recorded in nature. 

The researchers plan to investigate the meteorites further in order to understand the conditions under which their parent asteroid formed. “That’s my expertise — how you tease out the geologic processes and the geologic history of the asteroid this rock was once part of,” Herd said. “I never thought I’d be involved in describing brand new minerals just by virtue of working on a meteorite.”

The team is also looking into material science applications of the minerals.

However, future scientific insights from the El Ali meteorite could be in peril. The meteorite has now been moved to China in search of a potential buyer, which could limit researchers’ access to the space rock for investigation.

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