Six years ago, an Australian man named David Hole set out on a journey of finding gold.
Armed with a metal detector, he scoured to the Maryborough Regional Park in Melbourne—a famous Australian gold rush site of the 19th Century.
To his amazement and sheer luck, nestled between yellow clay, Mr Hole did find something.
Determined that he'd struck gold, he picked up a reddish rock that was only 39 cm long and 14 cm wide but weighed 17 kgs for some reason.
From sawing and sledgehammering to soaking it in acid, Mr Hole tried every possible way to split open this supposedly gold-laden rock.
Alas! The rock wouldn't budge and remained whole!
Disappointed, Mr Hole dropped it on a shelf, where it gathered dust for the next few years.
Eventually, hoping for closure, he lugged the rock to the Melbourne museum, where he was informed that the rock he'd brought did not have any gold nugget.
However, Mr Hole was in for an even better surprise. The rock was out of the world, literally!
The rock's appearance gave away a clue to Dermot Henry, Melbourne museum's geologist.
This sculpted, dimpled 'rock' was, in fact, a meteorite.
When these rocks come in contact with the atmosphere, they melt on the outside, and the atmosphere sculpts them.
Out of the thousands of rocks that people had brought to the museum, only two had turned out to be genuine meteorites, this being the second.
Excited, Henry ran tests and found that this meteorite was 4.6 billion years old, older than our Earth!
On slicing the rock with a super-hard diamond saw, the rock revealed a cross-section of tiny silver droplets.
These were formerly silicate mineral droplets crystallised from the super-hot gas cloud and gave birth to our solar system.
The meteorite was made of H5 chondrite, the same kind of rock that made up the Earth and the rest of the solar system due to gravity gently clumping those rocks together.
Friction would have overheated the rock, turning it red and molten on the surface.
It would have shot across the sky before crashing on the ground in the dense bush, where David discovered it years later.
According to Henry, the absence of weathering on the rock indicated that it arrived on Earth within the last 200 years.
And given its size, it was most likely seen falling!
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While searching for life in the Gulf of Mexico, researchers pulled out a new bizarre-looking species of isopod, whose head resembles the Darth Vader from Star Wars!
This new-found crustacean, named Bathonymus yucatanensis, has 14 legs and is around 26 cm long — approximately 25 times larger than its closest relative, the common woodlouse.
While these blonde creatures seem pretty scary, the "Vanilla Vaders" are, in fact, harmless to humans.
Their huge size is only due to deep-sea gigantism — a phenomenon wherein ocean dwellers grow bigger than their terrestrial relatives due to lack of sunlight.
This super-Earth is a rocky world, on which a year is equal to just 11 Earth days.
The short orbit is down to the red dwarfs being a lot smaller than the Sun that centres our solar system. But the smaller sizes also make their gravitational fields less expansive than the Sun's.
Therefore, Ross 508b revolves around its red dwarf at a distance of just 5 million km. Mercury, in comparison, is about 60 million km from the Sun.
The short distance between this super-Earth & its red dwarf begs the question: how could it possibly be habitable?
#Japan is making grand plans of creating interplanetary #trains and champagne flute-like glass habitats in its bid to send and host humans on the #Moon and #Mars!
An interplanetary transportation system dubbed the 'Hexatrack', which maintains a gravity of 1G during long-distance travel to mitigate the effects of prolonged exposure to low gravity, has been proposed by #Japanese researchers.
The #trains will also possess 'Hexacapsules', which are essentially hexagon-shaped capsules with a moving device in the middle.
In 2012, the almost-complete skeleton of a new kind of #dinosaur was found in the northern Patagonia region of #Argentina.
The dinosaur has been christened #Meraxes gigas. The generic epithet is an ode to a dragon in the #GameOfThrones series.
Standing at the height of 11 m (36 ft) and weighing roughly 4000 kgs, the #dinosaur sported several crests, bumps and horns on its skull, which lent it a menacing appearance.
But the highlight of the findings is that the dinosaur had teeny-tiny arms, just like the #Trex!
Dr Jose, along with an international research team from the US, UK and Australia, will be examining the Galactic Centre Cloud (GCC) — the central molecular zone of our Milky Way — in April 2023.
They have been allotted 27.3 hours over the access period of 12 months.