Alien Minerals Discovered at Ancient Meteorite Strike Site in Scotland

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Geologists have uncovered mineral forms never before seen on Earth at the site of a 60 million-year-old meteorite strike on the Isle of Skye in Scotland.

When probing a thick layer of ancient lava flow on the small, picturesque island, Simon Drake and colleague Andy Beard from Birkbeck, University of London, were surprised to find a bizarre-looking rock.

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“When we looked at the rock to start off with, it was very, very strange indeed,” Drake tells Newsweek. “It looked completely out of place.… We were staggered.”

Geology published the results of the research, of which Drake is lead author.

Upon further analysis with electron microprobes, the team found minerals that led them to believe the rock was of extra-terrestrial origin.

“The most compelling evidence really is the presence of vanadium-rich and niobium-rich osbornite. Neither of these have ever been found on Earth before. We have these mineral totally enclosed in native iron, which itself is not of this planet,” Drake says.

NASA’s Stardust spacecraft found vanadium-rich osbornite in the path of a comet in 2004. Stardust collected space dust floating in the trail of the 4.5 billion-year-old Wild 2 comet.

As well as the exotic mineral forms, the team reported the osbornite had not melted, which means that it is probably an original chunk of the meteorite itself.

The discovery of reidite in their samples also suggests the minerals have come from meteorites. “If you have a meteorite impact at extreme pressures, the mineral zircon will convert to a much denser mineral,” Drake explains. “This instantaneous conversion from zircon to reidite has only ever been discovered on Earth at meteor impact sites.”

Four miles away, the research team found the same minerals buried in a two-meter-thick layer of hardened volcanic lava.

Volcanic Activity May Have Alien Origins

The Isle of Skye is of particular interest to geologists because it was created during a period of extreme volcanic activity. The island was formed when magma rose from deep inside the Earth and broke through the crust. The same event is believed to be responsible for modern-day Iceland.

But of particular interest is what caused this event in the first place, Drake says.

“Whilst we can’t say that the volcanological evolution of Skye was started by a meteorite, we think it was definitely a driver for that impact,” Drake told Newsweek.

Although evidence suggests that at least some volcanic activity took place before the meteorite strike, Drake believes it was minimal. As well as driving the forging we see today, some scientists believe that meteorite activity could have been the trigger for life on Earth.

His research team is now looking beyond the small Isle of Skye to the wider geological area, the North Atlantic Igneous Province, which stretches all the way to Greenland.

This discovery, Drake says, could have implications for the origins of this entire region.

DukeLukeivi on December 15th, 2017 at 15:30 UTC »

Welcome back, Commander...

In 2017, a meteor fell to Earth near the Tiber River in Italy. The meteor was found to contain a mysterious alien mineral, which began to spread around the globe and was dubbed "Tiberium" for its place of discovery. People soon realized its potential, both as an economic foundation and as a weapon. They also realized the dangers it posed. This is the story of what happened next...

UnpluggedUnfettered on December 15th, 2017 at 14:50 UTC »

"The most compelling evidence really is the presence of vanadium-rich and niobium-rich osbornite. Neither of these have ever been found on Earth before." . . . Is this a weird phrasing around osbornite being found only in meteors, or is this just a flatly false statement? EDIT: It's just that I'm a total layman and took "neither of these" to mean vanadium and niobium instead of each one in osbornite https://pubs.geoscienceworld.org/gsa/geology/article/525169/discovery-of-a-meteoritic-ejecta-layer-containing

Fywq on December 15th, 2017 at 13:57 UTC »

Disclaimer: I have not read the paper in Geology, only this article. With that said: I'm a geologist myself and while this is super interesting I think it is an outlandish claim that this meteor strike should be the primary source of the volcanism in the north atlantic. If that meteor strike had been so powerful we would find traces of it all over the globe like we do with the Yucatan crater and the iridium anomaly, and I we could never expect to find unmelted material from the meteor itself if it was big and powerful enough to turn a bit of early volcanism into a full island forming mid ocean ridge.