Australian Gold-Digger Finds Giant Nugget That Turns Out To Be A Meteorite

Australian Gold-Digger Finds Giant Nugget That Turns Out To Be A Meteorite

Back in May 2015, an Australian prospector set off to scour the MaryboɾօυɢҺ Regional Park in search of his fortune, but instead of strikinggold, he came across something that was – unfortunately for him – priceless. Intrigued by the density and weight of a slightly odd-looking reddish rock, David Hole spent the next four years attempting to crack open this seemingly impenetrable specimen, only to eventually discover that it was in fact a 4.6-billion-year-oldmeteorite.

Mr Hole stumbled upon the find with the help of a metal detector while digging for gold near Melbourne, in a region that had become synonymous with the precious metal during the 19th-century gold-rush. Hoping to find a nugget inside the rock, he later attempted to access its interior using everything from acid to a sledgehammer, without success.

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Baffled as to why the rock was so reluctant to reveal its inner secrets, he decided to take it to the Melbourne Museum, where it was identified as a meteorite.

Scientists used a diamond saw to slice off a sliver of the ancientspace rock, discovering that it was in fact anH chondrite. The most common type of meteorite, H chondrites contain a high percentage of iron and make up about 40 percent of all meteorites ever found.

Describing the rock, Melbourne Museum geologist Dermot Henry told theSydney Morning Heraldthat “it had this sculpted, dimpled look to it,” which resulted from the outside of the meteorite melting as it plunged thɾօυɢҺ Earth’s atmosphere.

The object’s extreme weight is attributed to some of the metals it contains, including dense forms of iron and nickel. It is also speckled with droplets of metals called chondrules, which formed during the early stages of the Solar System’s development before later becoming embedded in an asteroid.

The meteorite has been named MaryboɾօυɢҺ after the place where it was found, and carbon dating suggests it crash-landed between 100 and 1,000 years ago.

Describing the specimen in theProceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria, the team lists a number of recorded meteorite sightings from the annals of history that could possibly correlate to MaryboɾօυɢҺ. One such sighting was ɾєρօɾτed by a Harry E. Hallett in a letter to The Argus in June 1923.

Addressing the editors, he describes how the “brilliant meteor… almost dazzled me, and horses out in the paddocks neighed such a neigh of fear that I will never forget it.”

Weighing 17 kilograms (37.5 pounds), the MaryboɾօυɢҺ meteor is the second largest ever to be found in the state of Victoria.

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