http://www.technologyreview.com/view/514511/first-tunguska-meteorite-fragments-discovered/

First Tunguska Meteorite Fragments Discovered
The Physics arXiv Blog
May 2, 2013

Nobody knows what exploded over Siberia in 1908 but the discovery 
of the first fragments could finally solve the mystery

The Tunguska impact event is one of the great mysteries of modern history. 
The basic facts are well known. On 30 June 1908, a vast and powerful 
explosion engulfed an isolated region of Siberia near the Podkamennaya 
Tunguska River.

The blast was 1000 times more powerful than the bomb dropped on Hiroshima, 
registered 5 on the Richter scale and is thought to have knocked down 
some 80 million trees over an area of 2000 square kilometres. The region 
is so isolated, however, that historians recorded only one death and just 
handful of eyewitness reports from nearby. 

But the most mysterious aspect of this explosion is that it left no crater 
and scientists have long argued over what could have caused it.

The generally accepted theory is that the explosion was the result of a 
meteorite or comet exploding in the Earth's atmosphere. That could have 
caused an explosion of this magnitude without leaving a crater. Such an event 
would almost certainly have showered the region in fragments of the parent body 
but no convincing evidence has ever emerged.

In the 1930s, an expedition to the region led by the Russian mineralogist 
Leonid Kulik returned with a sample of melted glassy rock containing bubbles. 
Kulik considered this evidence of an impact event. 

But the sample was somehow lost and has never undergone modern analysis. 
As such, there is no current evidence of an impact in the form of meteorites.

That changes today with the extraordinary announcement by Andrei Zlobin from 
the Russian Academy of Sciences that he has found three rocks from the 
Tunguska region with the telltale characteristics of meteorites. If he 
is right, these rocks could finally help solve once and for all what kind 
of object struck Earth all those years ago.

Zlobin's story is remarkable in a number of ways. The area of greatest interest 
for meteor scientists is called the Suslov depression, which lies directly 
beneath 
the location of the air blast and is the place where meteorite debris was most 
likely to fall. 

Dig into the peat bogs here and you can easily find layers that show clear 
evidence 
of the explosion. Zlobin said he dug more than ten prospect holes in the hope 
of 
finding meteorite fragments, but without success.

However, he had more luck exploring the bed of the local Khushmo River, where 
stones are likely to collect over a long period of time. He collected around 
100 
interesting specimens and returned to Moscow with them.

This expedition took place in 1988 and for some unexplained reason, Zlobin 
waited 20 
years to examine his haul in detail. But in 2008, he sorted the collection and 
found 
three stones with clear evidence of melting and regmalypts, thumblike 
impressions 
found on the surface of meteorites which are caused by ablation as the hot rock 
falls 
through the atmosphere at high speed.

Zlobin and others have used tree ring evidence to estimate the temperatures 
that the 
blast created on the ground and says that these were not high enough to melt 
rocks on 
the surface. However, the fireball in the Earth's atmosphere would have been 
hot enough 
for this.

So Zlobin concludes that the rocks must be fragments of whatever body collided 
with 
Earth that day. 

Zlobin has not yet carried out a detailed chemical analysis of the rocks that 
would 
reveal their chemical and isotopic composition. So the world will have to wait 
for this 
to get a better idea of the nature of the body.

However, the stony fragments do not rule out a comet since the nucleus could 
easily 
contain rock fragments, says Zlobin. Indeed he has calculated that the density 
of the 
impactor must have been about 0.6 grams per cubic centimetre, which is about 
the same 
as nucleus of Halley's comet. Zlobin says that together the evidence seems 
"excellent 
confirmation of cometary origin of the Tunguska impact."

Clearly there is more work to be done here, particularly the chemical analysis 
perhaps 
with international cooperation and corroboration.  

Then there is also the puzzle of why Zlobin has waited so long to analyse his 
samples. 
It's not hard to imagine that the political changes that engulfed the Soviet 
Union in 
the year after his expedition may have played a role in this, but it still 
requires 
some explaining.

Nevertheless, this has the potential to help clear up one of the outstanding 
mysteries 
of the 20th century and finally determine the origin of the largest Earth 
impact in 
recorded history. 

Ref: arxiv.org/abs/1304.8070: Discovery of Probably Tunguska Meteorites at the 
Bottom 
of Khushmo River's Shoal 

______________________________________________

Visit the Archives at http://www.meteorite-list-archives.com
Meteorite-list mailing list
[email protected]
http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list

Reply via email to