Tag Archives: meteorite

Near Earth Objects; the database designed to save humanity

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Destruction wrought be the 1908 Tunguska impact

The media love natural disasters, even those that don’t exist. Last week (early October, 2017), dramatic footage of a (simulated) super-volcano eruption beneath Auckland city was aired by several international media outlets, with headlines announcing the city’s calamitous destruction. But there is no super-volcano beneath Auckland. The excitement was short-lived.  While Auckland smouldered (as if that wasn’t enough), it was announced that New Zealand’s North Island could experience a subduction zone earthquake that, in its aftermath, would leave 1000s dead. An interesting backdrop to New Zealand’s recent election. Having scared the local population to death, our purveyors of science moved on to the next concern; other “what ifs…”.

Asteroid impacts are no longer de rigueur; perhaps it’s the turn of super-volcanoes’, or because NASA and the European Space Agency (ESA) have stated, with some confidence, that no large impacts are expected within the next 100 years. And whereas the media may find this Continue reading

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The origin of life: Panspermia, meteorites, and a bit of luck

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In the opening scenes of Stanley Kubrick’s 2001 Space Odyssey (1968), Neanderthal-like folk are scrounging for food, squabbling with a neighbouring tribe who are intent on competing for the meagre lickings (a reactionary condition that would not bode well for future humanity). One of them picks up a large bone.   There’s instant recognition, seemingly influenced by a black obelisk that appears mysteriously, that it can be used for something else. His neighbour lies in a crumpled heap. In what has become an enduring Sci-fi image, he triumphantly hurls his weapon into the air, whereupon Kubrick transforms it into an orbiting space station. Continue reading

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Throwing the Celestial Dice

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NASA image of a young lunar crater

The expression global extinction frequently conjures images of all life being snuffed out by an act of celestial hubris.  Asteroids, bolides or comets can be lobbed our way at whim.  Earth, in its first billion years or so was probably hammered by extra-terrestrial bits of rock and ice.  The cratered surface of our moon attests to this.  Some argue that it was these early collisions that provided at least some of our water and possibly even the organic compounds that eventually gave rise to life itself. Continue reading

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